US5861543A - Bacillus thuringiensis strains and their insecticidal proteins - Google Patents
Bacillus thuringiensis strains and their insecticidal proteins Download PDFInfo
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- US5861543A US5861543A US08/532,547 US53254795A US5861543A US 5861543 A US5861543 A US 5861543A US 53254795 A US53254795 A US 53254795A US 5861543 A US5861543 A US 5861543A
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- C07K14/195—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from bacteria
- C07K14/32—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from bacteria from Bacillus (G)
- C07K14/325—Bacillus thuringiensis crystal peptides, i.e. delta-endotoxins
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- A01N63/00—Biocides, pest repellants or attractants, or plant growth regulators containing microorganisms, viruses, microbial fungi, animals or substances produced by, or obtained from, microorganisms, viruses, microbial fungi or animals, e.g. enzymes or fermentates
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- A01N63/00—Biocides, pest repellants or attractants, or plant growth regulators containing microorganisms, viruses, microbial fungi, animals or substances produced by, or obtained from, microorganisms, viruses, microbial fungi or animals, e.g. enzymes or fermentates
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
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- C12N1/20—Bacteria; Culture media therefor
- C12N1/205—Bacterial isolates
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12N—MICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
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- C12N15/63—Introduction of foreign genetic material using vectors; Vectors; Use of hosts therefor; Regulation of expression
- C12N15/79—Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts
- C12N15/82—Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts for plant cells, e.g. plant artificial chromosomes (PACs)
- C12N15/8241—Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology
- C12N15/8261—Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology with agronomic (input) traits, e.g. crop yield
- C12N15/8271—Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology with agronomic (input) traits, e.g. crop yield for stress resistance, e.g. heavy metal resistance
- C12N15/8279—Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology with agronomic (input) traits, e.g. crop yield for stress resistance, e.g. heavy metal resistance for biotic stress resistance, pathogen resistance, disease resistance
- C12N15/8286—Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology with agronomic (input) traits, e.g. crop yield for stress resistance, e.g. heavy metal resistance for biotic stress resistance, pathogen resistance, disease resistance for insect resistance
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12R—INDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES C12C - C12Q, RELATING TO MICROORGANISMS
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
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- Y02A—TECHNOLOGIES FOR ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02A40/00—Adaptation technologies in agriculture, forestry, livestock or agroalimentary production
- Y02A40/10—Adaptation technologies in agriculture, forestry, livestock or agroalimentary production in agriculture
- Y02A40/146—Genetically Modified [GMO] plants, e.g. transgenic plants
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
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- Y10S424/00—Drug, bio-affecting and body treating compositions
- Y10S424/832—Drug, bio-affecting and body treating compositions involving bacterial toxin that has modified amino acid sequence
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
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- Y10S—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10S530/00—Chemistry: natural resins or derivatives; peptides or proteins; lignins or reaction products thereof
- Y10S530/82—Proteins from microorganisms
- Y10S530/825—Bacteria
Definitions
- This invention relates to four novel strains of Bacillus thuringiensis (the "BTS02617A strain”, the “BTS02618A strain”, the “BTS02654B strain” and the “BTS02652E strain"), each of which produces crystallized proteins (the “BTS02617A crystal proteins”, the “BTS02618A crystal proteins”, the “BTS02654B crystal proteins” and the “BTS02652E crystal proteins", respectively) which are packaged in crystals (the "BTS02617A crystals", the "BTS02618A crystals", the "BTS02654B crystals” and the "BTS02652E crystals", respectively) during sporulation.
- BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains were deposited under the provisions of the Budapest Treaty at the Belgian Coordinated Collections of Microorganisms-Collection Laboratorium voor Microbiologie Belgium ("BCCM-LMG”), R.U.G., K. Ledeganckstraat 35, B-9000 Gent.
- This invention also relates to an insecticide composition that is active against Lepidoptera and that comprises the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, as such, or preferably the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E crystals, crystal proteins or the active component(s) thereof as an active ingredient.
- This invention further relates to a gene (the "bTS02618A gene"), which is present in the genome of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains and which encodes an insecticidal protein (the "BTS02618A protoxin") that is found in the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E crystals.
- bTS02618A gene a gene (the "bTS02618A gene”), which is present in the genome of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains and which encodes an insecticidal protein (the "BTS02618A protoxin”) that is found in the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E crystals.
- the BTS02618A protoxin is the protein that is produced by the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains before being packaged into their respective BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E crystals.
- This invention still further relates to a toxin (the "BTS02618A toxin") which can be obtained (e.g., by trypsin digestion) from the BTS02618A protoxin.
- the BTS02618A toxin is an insecticidally active protein which can be liberated from the BTS02617A crystals, the BTS02618A crystals, the BTS02654B crystals, and the BTS02652E crystals, which are produced by the BTS02617A strain, the BTS02618A strain, the BTS02654B strain and the BTS02652E strain, respectively.
- This toxin and its protoxin have a high activity against a wide range of lepidopteran insects, particularly against Noctuidae, especially against Spodoptera and Aqrotis spp., but also against other important lepidopteran insects such as Pyralidae, particularly the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis, Gelechiidae such as Phthorimaea operculella and Yponomeutidae such as Plutella xylostella. Furthermore, the BTS02618A protein is the first Bt protein with significant activity towards Acrotis seqetum.
- (pro)toxin This new characteristic of the BTS02618A protoxin and toxin (“(pro)toxin”), i.e., the combination of activity against different economically important Lepidopteran insect families such as Noctuidae, Yponomeutidae, Gelechiidae and Pyralidae, makes this (pro)toxin an ideally suited compound for combatting a wide range of insect pests by contacting these insects with the (pro)toxin, e.g., by spraying or by expressing the bTS02618A gene in plant-associated bacteria or in plants.
- the BTS02618A toxin is believed to represent the smallest portion of the BTS02618A protoxin which is insecticidally effective against Lepidoptera.
- This invention also relates to transformed Bacillus thuringiensis strains, containing DNA sequences encoding a BTS02618A protein or variants thereof having substantially the same insecticidal activity.
- This invention yet further relates to a chimeric gene that can be used to transform a plant cell and that contains the following operably linked DNA fragments:
- bTS02618A gene part a part of the bTS02618A gene (the "insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part") encoding an insecticidally effective portion of the BTS02618A protoxin, preferably a truncated part of the bTS02618A gene (the "truncated bTS02618A gene”) encoding just the BTS02618A toxin;
- This chimeric gene is hereinafter generally referred to as the "bTS02618A chimeric gene”.
- This invention also relates to:
- a cell (the "transformed plant cell") of a plant, such as corn or cotton, the genome of which is transformed with the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, preferably the bTS02618A chimeric gene;
- a plant (the "transformed plant") which is regenerated from the transformed plant cell or is produced from the so-regenerated plant and their seeds, the genome of which contains the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, preferably the bTS02618A chimeric gene, and which is resistant to Lepidoptera.
- This invention still further relates to:
- a microbial organism such as B. thuringiensis or Pseudomonas spp., the genome of which is transformed with all or part of the bTS02618A gene;
- Another embodiment of the present invention relates to artificially made bTS02618A genes which encode BTS02618A proteins, and to proteins which are more protease resistant than native Bt proteins, more preferably the native BTS02618A protein.
- a particular example of a protein that is more protease resistant is the BTS02618Aa protein.
- the present invention also relates to a DNA sequence encoding the BTS02618Aa protein.
- This chimeric gene is hereinafter generally referred to as the "bTS02618Aa chimeric gene”.
- This invention further relates to:
- a cell (the "transformed plant cell") of a plant, such as corn or cotton, the genome of which is transformed with the insecticidally effective bTS02618Aa gene part, preferably the bTS02618Aa chimeric gene;
- a plant (the "transformed plant") which is regenerated from the transformed plant cell or is produced from the so-regenerated plant and their seeds, the genome of which contains the insecticidally effective bTS02618Aa gene part, preferably the bTS02618Aa chimeric gene, and which is resistant to Lepidoptera.
- This invention still further relates to:
- a microbial organism such as B. thuringiensis or Pseudomonas spp., the genome of which is transformed with all or part of a DNA sequence encoding the BTS02618Aa protein;
- Yet another embodiment of the present invention relates to insecticidal compositions that are active against Lepidoptera and that comprise a more protease resistant Bt protein, more particularly the BTS02618Aa protein or a variant thereof which has substantially the same insecticidal activity.
- B. thuringiensis is a Gram-positive bacterium which produces endogenous crystals upon sporulation.
- the crystals are composed of proteins which are specifically toxic against insect larvae. These crystal proteins and corresponding genes have been classified based on their structure and insecticidal spectrum (Hofte and Whiteley, 1989).
- the four major classes are Lepidoptera-specific (cryI), Lepidoptera- and Diptera-specific (cryII), Coleoptera-specific (cryIII), and Diptera-specific (cryIV) genes.
- BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains are provided.
- Cutworms such as Agrotis ipsilon and Agrotis segetum
- Mamestra spp. e.g., the cabbage moth, Mamestra brassica
- Spodoptera spp. armyworms, such as Spodoptera exigua, Spodoptera frugiverda, Spodoptera littoralis and Spodoptera litura
- Pyralidae e.g., the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis
- Gelechiidae such as Phthorimaea operculella and Yponomeutidae (such as Plutella xylostella) which are major pests of various economically important crops, such as corn, cotton and many vegetables such as Brassicas.
- a plant cell genome is transformed with the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, preferably the truncated bTS02618A gene, or an equivalent thereof such as a modified, synthetic bTS02618A gene. It is preferred that this transformation be carried out with the bTS02618A chimeric gene.
- the resulting transformed plant cell can be used to produce transformed plants, seeds of transformed plants and plant cell cultures consisting essentially of the transformed cells.
- the transformed cells in some or all of the tissues of the transformed plants 1) contain the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part as a stable insert in their genome, and 2) express the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part by producing an insecticidally effective portion of its BTS02618A protoxin, preferably its BTS02618A toxin, thereby rendering the plant resistant to Lepidoptera.
- the transformed plant cells of this invention can also be used to produce, for recovery, such insecticidal Bt proteins.
- a process for rendering a plant resistant to Lepidoptera by transforming the plant cell genome with the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, preferably the truncated bTS02618A gene, or an equivalent thereof.
- the plant cell be transformed with the bTS02618A chimeric gene.
- the BTS02618A protoxin the insecticidally effective portions of such protoxin and the BTS02618A toxin, as well as functional parts of the BTS02618A toxin, as well as the bTS02618A gene, the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, the truncated bTS02618A gene and the chimeric bTS02618A gene, as well as their equivalents.
- a DNA sequence either natural or artificial, encoding the BTS02618A protoxin or insecticidally effective portions thereof, such as the toxin, is provided.
- an insecticidal composition against Lepidoptera particularly Noctuidae, Pyralidae, Gelechiidae and Yponomeutidae
- a method for controlling Lepidoptera particularly Noctuidae, Pyralidae, Gelechiidae and Yponomeutidae
- the insecticidal composition comprises the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, crystals and/or crystal proteins or the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin and/or insecticidally effective protoxin portions or their equivalents.
- bacteria particularly E. coli and Bacillus thuringiensis transformed to express a DNA encoding the BTS02618A protein variant, such as the BTS02618Aa protein or more improved protease resistant Bt proteins are provided.
- an artificial DNA sequence encoding the BTS02618A protein as well as new forms of Bt proteins with improved protease resistance, more particularly the BTS02618Aa or the modified BTS02618A protein are provided, and DNA sequences encoding these new proteins. Further provided are plant cells expressing an artificial DNA sequence encoding the BTS02618A toxin or Bt toxins with improved protease resistance, more preferably the BTS02618Aa toxin.
- an insecticidal composition comprising as an active ingredient the BTS02618Aa protein, or a variant thereof with substantially the same insecticidal activity. Also provided is a method to combat Lepidopteran insects by contacting these insects with Bt proteins having improved protease resistance, more preferably the BTS02618Aa protein or a variant thereof.
- new Bt proteins preferably Lepidoptera active Bt proteins, having substantially the same insecticidal activity as the native Bt protein, but characterized in their resistance to further proteolytic cleavage of the about 60 to 70 kD toxin form.
- Such new Bt proteins have inactivated internal protease cleavage sites, so that these proteins have increased stability while retaining substantially the same insecticidal activity.
- these new Bt proteins are not readily cleaved into smaller proteolytic fragments which lower their insecticidal activity upon prolonged incubation in the presence of proteases.
- FIG. 1 represents Southern blot analysis of Alul-digested total DNA of Bt strain HD127 (lane 1), the BTS02618A strain (lane 2), Bt strain BTS02459 (containing cryIA(c); 81k, cryIC en cryIE, lane 3), and Bt strain BTS02480E (containing the same genes as HD-127, lane 4), using a mixture of DNA-probes for cryI crystal protein genes, including the cryIG probe (SEQ ID NO:1). Each band corresponds to a particular crystal protein gene.
- the BTS02618A strain is found to contain the cryIA(b) gene and a novel gene, which is the bTS02618A gene, identified by an Alul fragment of approximately 530 bp, hybridizing to the cryIG probe of SEQ ID NO:1.
- the names of the recognized cryI genes are indicated, as well as the size of some fragments.
- the bTS02618A gene is indicated with three asterisks; "?” indicates an unknown gene fragment.
- the BTS02618A protoxin of this invention can be isolated in a conventional manner from the BTS02617A strain, deposited on July, 2 at the BCCM-LMG under accession number LMG P-12592, the BTS02618A strain, deposited on Jul. 2, 1992 at the BCCM-LMG under accession number LMG P-12593, the BTS02654B strain, deposited on Jul. 2, 1992 at the BCCM-LMG under accession number LMG P-12594, or the BTS02652E strain deposited on Mar. 1, 1993 at the BCCM-LMG under accession number LMG P-13493.
- the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E crystals can be isolated from sporulated cultures of their respective strain (Mahillon and Delcour, 1984), and then, the BTS02618A protoxin can be isolated from the crystals according to the method of Hofte et al. (1986).
- the protoxins can be used to prepare monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies specific for the protoxin in a conventional manner (Hofte et al., 1988).
- the BTS02618A toxin can be obtained by protease (e.g., trypsin) digestion of the BTS02618A protoxin.
- the bTS02618A gene can be isolated in a conventional manner.
- the bTS02618A gene can be identified in the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, using the procedure described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 821,582, filed Jan. 22, 1986, and in EPA 86/300,291.1 and 88/402,115.5 (which are incorporated herein by reference).
- the bTS02618A gene was identified by: digesting total DNA from one of the above strains with restriction enzymes; size fractionating the DNA fragments, so produced, into DNA fractions of 5 to 10 Kb; ligating these fractions to cloning vectors; screening the E. coli, transformed with the cloning vectors, with a DNA probe that was constructed from a region of the cryIG gene (Smulevitch et al., 1991; Gleave et al., 1992).
- bTS02618A gene includes a DNA sequence encoding the BTS02618A protoxin or toxin or functionally equivalent variants thereof. Indeed, because of the degeneracy of the genetic code, some amino acid codons can be replaced with others without changing the amino acid sequence of the protein. Furthermore, some amino acids can be substituted by other equivalent amino acids without significantly changing the insecticidal activity of the protein. Also, changes in amino acid composition in regions of the molecule, different from those responsible for binding and toxicity are less likely to cause a difference in insecticidal activity of the protein. Such equivalents of the gene include DNA sequences hybridizing to the DNA sequence of the BTS02618A toxin or protoxin of SEQ ID. No.
- hybridization refers to conventional hybridization conditions, most preferably stringent hybridization conditions.
- BTS02618A protein is a general term for the BTS02618A protoxin and variants or mutants thereof with substantially the same insecticidal activity; for example, the BTS02618A or BTS02618Aa toxins.
- the term "more or improved protease resistant protein” means that the Bt protein fragment resulting from protease cleavage of the native protoxin does not result in a substantial loss of insecticidal activity due to the further cleavage of the insecticidally active toxin part of the protein. It is preferable that the insecticidally active toxin part of the protein be about 60 to 70 kD and more particularly that the further cleavage is at the N-terminal part of the toxin. It is also preferred that the protein is insecticidal for Lepidoptera.
- a preferred example of an "alternative form" of the bTS02618A gene is the artificial bTS02618A gene of SEQ ID. No. 6, encoding a BTS02618A toxin.
- a further preferred example of an artificial bTS02618A gene is illustrated in the DNA sequence of SEQ ID. No. 8, for reasons of clarity further named "the bTS02618Aa gene", encoding a (similar but different) protein with an insecticidal activity substantially similar to the BTS02618A protein.
- any other DNA sequences differing in their codon usage but encoding the same protein or a similar protein with substantially the same insecticidal activity can be constructed by the person skilled in the art.
- changing the codon usage to that of the host cell can increase gene expression (Bennetzen & Hall, 1982; Itakura, 1977).
- substantially the same when referring to a protein, is meant to include a protein that differs in some amino acids, or has some amino acids added (e.g., a fusion protein, see Vaeck et al., 1987) or deleted (e.g., N- or C-terminal truncation), while retaining the protein's insecticidal activity. It is generally known to those skilled in the art that general amino acid replacements in many parts of a polypeptide chain may be made without seriously modifying the activity of the polypeptide (Watson et al Molecular Biology of the Gene (1987) 226-227.
- the term "functional parts of the BTS02618A toxin" as used herein means any part(s) or domain(s) of the toxin with a specific structure that can be transferred to another (Bt) protein for providing a new hybrid protein with at least one functional characteristic (e.g., the binding and/or toxicity characteristics) of the BTS02618A toxin (Ge et al., 1991). Such parts can form an essential feature of the hybrid Bt protein with the binding and/or toxicity characteristics of the BTS02618A protein. Such a hybrid protein can have an enlarged host range, an improved toxicity and/or can be used in a strategy to prevent insect resistance development (European Patent Publication (“EP”) 408 403; Visser et al., 1993).
- EP European Patent Publication
- BTS02618Aa toxin refers to a new form of the BTS02618A toxin, differing in some amino acids from the native BTS02618A toxin.
- the BTS02618A protoxin has been found to be digested by proteases into an about 69 kD protein and about 55 kD protein, the latter having substantially lower insecticidal activity. The longer the protease digestion, the more of the about 55 kD protein was formed. This 55 kD protein was found to be cleaved by digestion at the Arginine at amino acid position 164 shown in SEQ ID. No. 4.
- the Arginine at this position was replaced with a Lysine
- the 43 N-terminal amino acids was replaced by amino acids Met-Ala
- the C-terminal end was truncated up to amino acid 666 (in SEQ ID. No. 4).
- the C-terminal end of the BTS02618Aa toxin can be further truncated to the minimum toxic fragment (up to amino acid 658 in SEQ ID. No. 4).
- the BTS02618Ab protein In another form of the BTS02618A protein, "the BTS02618Ab protein", this Arginine has been substituted with an Alanine. Both the BTS02618Aa/b proteins are less susceptible to proteases and still have substantially the same insecticidal activity. The part C-terminal from the toxic fragment of both the BTS02618Aa and BTS02618Ab protoxins is 100% identical to the C-terminal part of the BTS02618A protoxin.
- bTS02618Aa gene and the "bTS02618Ab gene”, as used herein, refer to DNA sequences encoding respectively the BTS02618Aa and BTS02618Ab proteins. It is evident that several DNA sequences can be devised once the amino acid sequence of the BTS02618Aa and BTS02618Ab proteins are known.
- Such other DNA sequences include synthetic or semi-synthetic DNA sequences that have been changed in order to inactivate certain sites in the gene, e.g., by selectively inactivating certain cryptic regulatory or processing elements present in the native sequence as described in PCT publications WO 91/16432 and WO 93/09218, or by adapting the overall codon usage to that of a more related host organism, preferably that of the host organism, in which expression is desired.
- Such a modification of the BTS02618A protein can also be achieved by deleting the Arginine at amino acid position 123, or by replacing this amino acid by another amino acid provided that the insecticidal activity of the new BTS02618A protein is not substantially changed.
- Other amino acids surrounding the protease cleavage site can also be altered such that the insecticidal activity is not substantially changed.
- the new proteins can be tested in routine bio-assays to compare their toxicity with that of the native BTS02618A protein.
- the overall toxicity parameters of such proteins should be similar to those of the native proteins.
- the CryIB protoxin (Brizzard & Whiteley, 1988), and a naturally occurring variant thereof (EP publication 408 403) has been found to be cleaved into an about 69 kD toxin and a smaller about 55 kD toxin by protease activity.
- modification of the Arginine at amino acid positions 144 and 146 (relative to the start codon) in the sequence of Brizzard & Whiteley (1988) or the sequence of EP 408 403 can increase the stability of the protein in the insect gut. Indeed, prolonged protease treatment of the CryIB protoxin, either obtained from Bt strain 4412 or expressed in E.
- Such a CryIB protein can be used together with the BTS02618A or BTS02618Aa protein and the CryIAb protein in combatting Lepidopteran insects, particularly Ostrinia nubilalis, by expressing DNA sequences encoding these proteins in a host cell, particularly a plant cell. So the modification of one or more amino acids is useful in other Bt proteins, particularly anti-Lepidoptera Bt proteins, that are also further cleaved by proteases.
- the 5 to 10 Kb fragments prepared from total DNA of the BTS02617A or BTS02618A or BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, can be ligated in suitable expression vectors and transformed in E. coli, and the clones can then be screened by conventional colony immunoprobing methods (French et al., 1986) for expression of the toxin with monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies raised against the BTS02618A toxin.
- the 5 to 10 Kb fragments prepared from total DNA of the BTS02617A or BTS02618A or BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, can be ligated in suitable Bt shuttle vectors (Lereclus et al., 1992) and transformed in a crystal minus Bt-mutant. The clones are then screened for production of crystals (detected by microscopy) or crystal proteins (detected by SDS-PAGE).
- bTS02618A gene was sequenced in a conventional manner (Maxam and Gilbert, 1980) to obtain the DNA sequence. Hybridization in Southern blots and sequence comparison indicated that this gene is different from previously described genes encoding protoxins and toxins with activity against Lepidoptera (Hofte and Whiteley, 1989).
- An insecticidally effective part of the bTS02618A gene encoding an insecticidally effective portion of its protoxin, and a truncated part of the gene, encoding just its toxin, can be made in a conventional manner after sequence analysis of the gene.
- the amino acid sequence of the BTS02618A protoxin and toxin was determined from the DNA sequence of the bTS02618A gene and the truncated bTS02618A gene.
- an insecticidally effective part or "a part" of the bTS02618A gene is meant a DNA sequence encoding a polypeptide which has fewer amino acids than the BTS02618A protoxin but which is still toxic to Lepidoptera.
- restriction sites can be introduced, flanking each gene or gene part. This can be done by site-directed mutagenesis, using well-known procedures (Stanssens et al., 1989; White et al., 1989).
- a monocot intron also can be added to the bTS02618A chimeric gene, and the DNA sequence of the bTS02618A gene part can be further changed in a translationally neutral manner, to modify possibly inhibiting DNA sequences present in the gene part by means of site-directed intron insertion and/or by introducing changes to the codon usage, e.g., adapting the codon usage to that most preferred by the specific plant (Murray et al., 1989) without changing significantly the encoded amino acid sequence.
- modified bTS02618A genes are shown in SEQ ID. Nos. 6 and 8, illustrating DNA sequences encoding the BTS02618A toxin and a variant thereof. These DNA sequences have an overall modified codon usage, which has been adapted to that of plants, particularly monocots such as corn.
- the DNA of SEQ ID. No. 6 encodes exactly the same toxin as the native bTS02618A gene, but yields higher expression levels in plants, particularly monocots such as corn, due to the adaptation of its codon usage to that of the plant host cells.
- the BTS02618Aa toxin was found to bind to a receptor different from the CryIAb toxin receptor population in Ostrinia nubilalis gut membranes. This indicates that the BTS02618A toxin has a unique receptor in its susceptible insects. The broad spectrum, the binding to a different receptor and the low homology with other Bt toxins indicates that the BTS02618A toxin represents a new class of Bt toxins. Since the BTS02618A toxin apparently recognizes a different target site, it can prove to be especially useful for preventing the development of insect resistance, or for combatting insects resistant to other Bt toxins.
- the BTS02618A toxin and its variants are extremely useful for transforming plants, e.g., monocots such as corn and vegetables such as Brassicas, to protect these plants from insect damage.
- the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part or its equivalent preferably the bTS02618A chimeric gene, encoding an insecticidally effective portion of the BTS02618A protoxin, can be stably inserted in a conventional manner into the nuclear genome of a single plant cell, and the so-transformed plant cell can be used in a conventional manner to produce a transformed plant that is insect-resistant.
- a disarmed Ti-plasmid, containing the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, in Agrobacterium tumefaciens can be used to transform the plant cell, and thereafter, a transformed plant can be regenerated from the transformed plant cell using the procedures described, for example, in EP 0,116,718, EP 0,270,822, PCT publication WO 84/02,913 and European Patent Application (“EPA”) 87/400,544.0 (which are also incorporated herein by reference), and in Gould et al. (1991).
- Preferred Ti-plasmid vectors each contain the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part between the border sequences, or at least located to the left of the right border sequence, of the T-DNA of the Ti-plasmid.
- other types of vectors can be used to transform the plant cell, using procedures such as direct gene transfer (as described, for example in EP 0,233,247), pollen mediated transformation (as described, for example in EP 0,270,356, PCT publication WO 85/01856, and U.S. Pat. No. 4,684,611), plant RNA virus-mediated transformation (as described, for example in EP 0,067,553 and U.S. Pat. No.
- the resulting transformed plant can be used in a conventional plant breeding scheme to produce more transformed plants with the same characteristics or to introduce the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part in other varieties of the same or related plant species.
- Seeds, which are obtained from the transformed plants contain the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part as a stable genomic insert.
- Cells of the transformed plant can be cultured in a conventional manner to produce the insecticidally effective portion of the BTS02618A protoxin, preferably the BTS02618A toxin, which can be recovered for use in conventional insecticide compositions against Lepidoptera (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 821,582; EPA 86/300291.1.).
- the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part preferably the truncated bTS02618A gene, is inserted in a plant cell genome so that the inserted gene is downstream (i.e., 3') of, and under the control of, a promoter which can direct the expression of the gene part in the plant cell. This is preferably accomplished by inserting the bTS02618A chimeric gene in the plant cell genome.
- Preferred promoters include: the strong constitutive 35S promoters (the "35S promoters") of the cauliflower mosaic virus of isolates CM 1841 (Gardner et al., 1981), CabbB-S (Franck et al., 1980) and CabbB-JI (Hull and Howell, 1987); and the TR1' promoter and the TR2' promoter (the “TR1' promoter” and “TR2' promoter", respectively) which drive the expression of the 1' and 2' genes, respectively, of the T-DNA (Velten et al., 1984).
- the TR1' promoter and the TR2' promoter the TR1' promoter and the TR2' promoter
- a promoter can be utilized which is not constitutive but rather is specific for one or more tissues or organs of the plant (e.g., leaves and/or roots) whereby the inserted bTS02618A gene part is expressed only in cells of the specific tissue(s) or organ(s).
- the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part could be selectively expressed in the leaves of a plant (e.g., corn, cotton) by placing the insecticidally effective gene part under the control of a light-inducible promoter such as the promoter of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase small subunit gene of the plant itself or of another plant such as pea as disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 821,582 and EPA 86/300,291.1.
- Another alternative is to use a promoter whose expression is inducible (e.g., by temperature or chemical factors).
- the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part is inserted in the plant genome so that the inserted gene part is upstream (i.e., 5') of suitable 3' end transcription regulation signals (i.e., transcript formation and polyadenylation signals).
- suitable 3' end transcription regulation signals i.e., transcript formation and polyadenylation signals.
- Preferred polyadenylation and transcript formation signals include those of the octopine synthase gene (Gielen et al., 1984) and the T-DNA gene 7 (Velten and Schell, 1985), which act as 3'-untranslated DNA sequences in transformed plant cells.
- the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part can optionally be inserted in the plant genome as a hybrid gene (EPA 86/300,291.1; Vaeck et al., 1987) under the control of the same promoter as a selectable marker gene, such as the neo gene (EP 0,242,236) encoding kanamycin resistance, so that the plant expresses a fusion protein.
- a hybrid gene EPA 86/300,291.1; Vaeck et al., 1987
- a selectable marker gene such as the neo gene (EP 0,242,236) encoding kanamycin resistance
- All or part of the bTS02618A gene, encoding an anti-lepidopteran protein, can also be used to transform other bacteria, such as a B. thuringiensis which has insecticidal activity against Lepidoptera or Coleoptera. Thereby, a transformed Bt strain can be produced which is useful for combatting a wide spectrum of lepidopteran and coleopteran insect pests or for combatting additional lepidopteran insect pests. Transformation of bacteria with all or part of the bTS02618A gene, incorporated in a suitable cloning vehicle, can be carried out in a conventional manner, preferably using conventional electroporation techniques as described in Mahillon et al. (1989) and in PCT Patent publication WO 90/06999.
- mutants of the BTS02618A, BTS02617A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains can be obtained by treating these strains with mutagenic agents such as nitrosoguanidine or with UV light; techniques which are well known to those skilled in the art.
- mutagenic agents such as nitrosoguanidine or with UV light; techniques which are well known to those skilled in the art.
- asporogenous mutants can be obtained by treatment with ethylmethane sulfonate. Such mutants can be screened for improved characteristics (such as suitability for large-scale fermentation and the like), while retaining substantially the same insecticidal activity.
- the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain also can be transformed with all or an insecticidally effective part of one or more foreign Bt genes such as: the bt18 gene (EP 0,358,557) or another Bt gene coding for an anti-Lepidoptera protein; and the bt109P gene (PCT publication WO 91/16433), coding for an anti-Coleoptera protein.
- a transformed Bt strain can be produced which is useful for combatting an even greater variety of insect pests (e.g., Coleoptera and/or additional Lepidoptera).
- Transformation of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain with all or part of a foreign Bt gene, incorporated in a conventional cloning vector, can be carried out in a well known manner, preferably using conventional electroporation techniques (Chassy et al., 1988) or other methods, e.g., as described by Lereclus et al. (1992).
- Each of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strains can be fermented by conventional methods (Dulmage, 1981; Bernhard and Utz, 1993) to provide high yields of cells. Under appropriate conditions which are well understood (Dulmage, 1981), the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains each sporulate to produce crystal proteins containing the BTS02168A protoxin in high yields.
- An insecticidal, particularly anti-lepidopteran, composition of this invention can be formulated in a conventional manner using the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain or preferably their respective crystals, crystal proteins or the BTS02168A protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portion as an active ingredient, together with suitable carriers, diluents, emulsifiers and/or dispersants (e.g., as described by Bernhard and Utz, 1993).
- This insecticide composition can be formulated as a wettable powder, pellets, granules or dust or as a liquid formulation with aqueous or non-aqueous solvents as a foam, gel, suspension, concentrate, etc.
- concentration of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, crystals, crystal proteins, or the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portions in such a composition will depend upon the nature of the formulation and its intended mode of use.
- an insecticide composition of this invention can be used to protect a field for 2 to 4 weeks against Lepidoptera with each application of the composition. For more extended protection (e.g., for a whole growing season), additional amounts of the composition should be applied periodically.
- a method for controlling insects, particularly Lepidoptera, in accordance with this invention preferably comprises applying (e.g., spraying), to a locus (area) to be protected, an insecticidal amount of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, spores, crystals, crystal proteins or the BTS02168A protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portions, preferably the BTS2168A toxin.
- the locus to be protected can include, for example, the habitat of the insect pests or growing vegetation or an area where vegetation is to be grown.
- cells of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain can be grown in a conventional manner on a suitable culture medium and then lysed using conventional means such as enzymatic degradation or detergents or the like.
- the protoxin can then be separated and purified by standard techniques such as chromatography, extraction, electrophoresis, or the like.
- the toxin can then be obtained by trypsin digestion of the protoxin.
- the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E cells can also be harvested and then applied intact, either alive or dead, preferably dried, to the locus to be protected.
- a purified BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain either alive or dead
- a cell mass that is 90.0 to 99.9% of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain.
- the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B, or BTS02652E cells, crystals or crystal proteins or the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin, or insecticidally effective protoxin portion can be formulated in an insecticidal composition in a variety of ways, using any number of conventional additives, wet or dry, depending upon the particular use.
- Additives can include wetting agents, detergents, stabilizers, adhering agents, spreading agents and extenders. Examples of such a composition include pastes, dusting powders, wettable powders, granules, baits and aerosol sprays.
- Bt cells, crystals, crystal proteins, protoxins, toxins, and insecticidally effective protoxin portions and other insecticides, as well as fungicides, biocides, herbicides and fertilizers can be employed along with the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E cells, crystals or crystal proteins or the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portions to provide additional advantages or benefits.
- Such an insecticidal composition can be prepared in a conventional manner, and the amount of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E cells, crystals or crystal proteins or the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portion employed depends upon a variety of factors, such as the insect pest targeted, the composition used, the type of area to which the composition is to be applied, and the prevailing weather conditions. Generally, the concentration of the BTS02618A protoxin, insecticidally effective protoxin portions or toxin will be at least about 0.1% by weight of the formulation to about 100% by weight of the formulation, more often from about 0.15% to about 0.8% by weight of the formulation.
- insects can be fed the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin, insecticidally effective protoxin portion or mixtures thereof in the protected area, that is in the area where such protoxin, toxin and/or insecticidally effective protoxin portion has been applied.
- some insects can be fed intact and alive cells of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain or transformants thereof, so that the insects ingest some of the strain's protoxin and suffer death or damage.
- any of the above described variants of the BTS02618A protein with substantially the same insecticidal activity can be used, preferably the BTS02618Aa and BTS02618Ab proteins.
- any of the above-described methods for transforming plants and bacteria can also be utilized to combat insects with the BTS02618Aa or BTS02618Ab proteins or other more protease resistant protein variants of the BTS02618A protein in lieu of the native BTS02618A protein.
- SEQ ID No. 1- Nucleotide sequence of the DNA probe used to isolate the bTS02618A gene. This probe is derived from part of the cryIG DNA sequence and is complementary to nucleotides 2732-2750 of the DNA sequence described by Smulevitch et al. (1991).
- SEQ ID No. 2- The 5' partial nucleotide sequence of the bTS02618A gene, comprising the presumptive translation initiation codon at nucleotide position 195-197.
- SEQ ID No. 4- The nucleotide sequence of the bTS02618A gene and the translated amino acid sequence of the BTS02618A protoxin.
- the open reading frame of the protoxin reaches from nucleotide 668 to nucleotide 4141.
- the translation initiation codon is at nucleotide position 668-670, the translation stop codon is at nucleotide position 4139-4141.
- the sequence of the about 69 kD BTS02618A toxin stretches from amino acid 44 to amino acid 658.
- SEQ ID. No. 6- The nucleotide sequence of a modified truncated bTS02618A gene, and the translated amino acid sequence of the BTS02618A toxin.
- SEQ ID. No. 7 The translated amino acid sequence of the modified bTS02618A toxin gene. Although only the toxin part is shown here, the full length protein is 100% identical in amino acid sequence to the BTS02618A protein (SEQ ID. No.5).
- SEQ ID. No. 8 The nucleotide sequence of the modified bTS02618Aa toxin gene, and the translated amino acid sequence of the BTS02618Aa toxin. Besides N- and C-terminal amino acid deletions and the addition of an Alanine codon after the N-terminal Methionine codon, the BTS02618Aa toxin only differs from the BTS02618A toxin in amino acid number 123 (Arg codon has been changed into a Lys codon).
- the BTS02618Aa protoxin is 100% identical to the BTS02618A protoxin in its part C-terminal from the toxin fragment.
- the BTS02617A, the BTS02618A and the BTS02654B strain were isolated from grain dust sampled in Cadlan, province of Bicol, The Philippines and were deposited at the BCCM-LMG on Jul. 2, 1992 under accession Nos. LMG P-12592, LMG P-12593 and LMG P-12594, respectively.
- Strain BTS02652E was also isolated from Philippine grain dust, and was deposited at the BCCM-IMG on Mar., 1, 1993under accession No. LMG P-13493.
- Each strain can be cultivated on conventional standard media, preferably T 3 medium (tryptone 3 g/l, tryptose 2 g/l, yeast extract 1.5 g/l, 5 mg MnCl 2 , 0.05M Na 2 PO 4 , pH 6.8 and 1.5% agar), preferably at 28° C.
- T 3 medium tryptone 3 g/l, tryptose 2 g/l, yeast extract 1.5 g/l, 5 mg MnCl 2 , 0.05M Na 2 PO 4 , pH 6.8 and 1.5% agar
- T 3 medium tryptone 3 g/l, tryptose 2 g/l, yeast extract 1.5 g/l, 5 mg MnCl 2 , 0.05M Na 2 PO 4 , pH 6.8 and 1.5% agar
- sporulation growth on T 3 medium is preferred for 48 hours at 28° C., followed by storage at 4° C.
- each of the strains can also grow under facultative anaerobic conditions, but sporulation only
- Sterilization of each strain occurs by autoclave treatment at 120° C. (1 bar pressure) for 20 minutes. Such treatment totally inactivates the spores and the BTS02617A,BTS02618A, BTS02654B, and BTS02652E protoxins. UV radiation (254 nm) also inactivates the spores.
- the Bt serotype of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains was determined to be serotype tolworthi H9 of all these strains which was determined by conventional serotyping methods as conducted by the WHO Collaborating Center for Entomopathogenic Bacillus.
- Toxicity assays were performed on neonate larvae (for Plutella xylostella, third instar larvae were used) fed on an artificial diet layered with spore-crystal mixtures from one of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains or the BTS02618A protoxin or toxin or the BTS02618Aa and BTS02618Ab toxins or protoxins.
- the artificial diet was dispensed in wells of Costar 24-well plates. Formaldehyde was omitted from the diet. 50 ⁇ l of a sample dilution was applied on the surface of the diet and dried in a laminar air flow.
- LC 50 assays the dilutions were made in a PBS-BSA buffer, and five dilutions were applied. Two larvae were placed in each well and 24 larvae were used per sample dilution. Dead and living M. brassica, S. fruciperda, H. virescens, O. nubilalis, Plutella xylostella and S. exigua larvae were counted on the fifth day, and dead and living A. ipsilon, A. seaetum and S. littoralis larvae were counted on the sixth day.
- LC 50 and LC 95 values were calculated using Probit-analysis (Finney, 1971), and the results are set forth below.
- the potato moth, Phthorimaea operculella was tested by the following assay: disks, cut from potato tubers, were dipped in solutions of varying concentrations of BTS0216Aa protein. Three of such disks, which were allowed to dry, were placed in a tray with 20 Phthorimaea larvae. Mortality was recorded after 4 to 5 days for each concentration applied.
- the purified BTS02618A protoxin also showed a significant toxicity to Ostrinia nubilalis larvae, as compared with the CryI toxins that are most active against Ostrinia.
- Plutella xylostella larvae also showed significant mortality after application of purified BTS02618A toxin to their artificial diet in several experiments.
- Crystal/spore mixtures of a bTS02618A gene-transformed crystal-minus Bt strain were also found to significantly inhibit larval growth of S. frugiverda larvae in insect feeding trials.
- the cutworm Aprotis segetum was also found to be susceptible to the BTS02618Aa toxin.
- all other CryI toxins tested (CryIAb, CryIAc, CryIAa, CryIB, CryIC, CryID, CryIE (Hofte & Whiteley 1989; EP 358 557)) were found to have an LC 50 of more than 15.000 ng/cm 2 for this insect.
- Agrotis segetum is an important pest insect on various crops.
- the BTS02618Aa toxin was tested on several insects and was found to have substantially the same insecticidal activity as the BTS02618A protein. Indeed, bio-assays were conducted with Heliothis virescens, Mamestra brassicae, Ostrinia nubilalis, SpodoPtera exigua and Spodoptera littoralis, and these showed only minor differences in LC 50 values when compared to the BTS02618A protein. This shows that the new BTS02618Aa toxin does not differ substantially in insecticidal activity from the native form.
- an Alanine mutant of the BTS02618A toxin and protoxin, the BTS02618Ab toxin and the BTS02618Ab protoxin were tested on Ostrinia nubilalis and were found to be substantially as toxic as the BTS02618Aa toxin or protoxin.
- the BTS02618Aa toxin was found to be non-toxic to the tested Coleopteran insects: Leptinotarsa decemlineata and Diabrotica undecimpunctata howardi were not affected by the BTS02618Aa toxin. These insects were tested in diet application assays well known in the art. See, for example, Rupar et al., 1991.
- the strains of this invention and the BTS02618A protein of this invention and its variants have a strong insecticidal activity against a broad range of insects that are not susceptible to any single currently available Bt protein and have an activity against at least three Spodoptera spp. and against other Noctuidae, such as A. ipsilon, A sepetum, M. brassica and H. virescens, as well as against Pyralidae, such as O. nubilalis, Gelechiidae such as P. operculella and Yponomeutidae such as Plutella xylostella.
- BTS02618Aa and BTS02618Ab toxins can also be used for combatting insects, and they have the added advantage that they are more stable, due to their lower susceptibility to protease activity, since almost no about 55 kD protein is formed.
- the bTS02618A gene was identified in the BTS02618A strain by Southern blot analysis (FIG. 1) of AluI digested total DNA of the strain using, as a DNA probe, the DNA sequence of the cryIG gene (Gleave et al., 1992) of SEQ ID No. 1 and using standard hybridization conditions. Partial DNA sequences of the bTS02618A gene, showing its 5' and 3' end portions, are shown in SEQ ID Nos. 2 and 3, respectively, and the full DNA sequence of the bTS02618A gene and the full amino acid sequence of the BTS02618A protein are shown in SEQ ID No. 4.
- the partial sequences of SEQ ID Nos. 2 and 3 allow the bTS02618A gene to be recognized in the BTS02617A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains and allow the construction of probes to identify and isolate the full gene sequence in these and other Bt strains.
- the translation initiation codon of the bTS02618A gene is identified at nucleotide position 195-197 in SEQ ID No. 2, corresponding to nucleotide position 668-670 in SEQ ID No.4.
- the translation stop codon is identified at nucleotide position 1146-1148 in SEQ ID No. 3, corresponding to nucleotide position 4139-4141 in SEQ ID No. 4.
- the bTS02618A gene was also identified in the BTS02617A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains by using the DNA sequence of SEQ ID No. 1 as a probe, as well as other DNA probes of conserved DNA fragments in cryI genes.
- the full length bTS02618A gene was found to encode a 129.9 kD protoxin.
- a comparison of the amino acid sequence with other known CryI proteins showed that the C-terminal part (C-terminal of conserved sequence block 5) was homologous with CryIG (88%).
- the best homology for the N-terminal part (the toxin) was found with the CryIB toxin, but this was found to be less than 50% (homology is expressed as the number of perfect matches divided by the number of amino acids of the longest fragment).
- the smallest insecticidal protein is believed to be a 69 kD (615 amino acids) protein stretching from amino acid number 44 to amino acid number 658 in SEQ ID No. 4.
- a truncated bTS02618A gene or an equivalent truncated gene preferably encodes the 69 kD protein of the BTS02618A protoxin of SEQ ID No.4 as described above.
- the bTS02618A gene was also introduced by routine procedures into a crystal-minus Bt 1715 berliner strain and a Bt HD-1 kurstaki strain (the production strain of DipelTM (Abbott Laboratories)) under the control of its own bacterial promoter, using an appropriate shuttle vector (Mahillon et al., 1988).
- the BTS02618Aa protein or other variants of the BTS02618A protein can be transferred to and expressed in a Bt strain by any method available in the art (Baum et al., 1991; Gamel & Piot, 1992; Lecadet et al., 1992), provided the vector used is compatible with the Bt host strain, and is stably maintained in the bacterial host. It is known that plasmid vectors having replicon homology with the host strain are not suitable vectors (Gamel & Piot, 1992).
- cassettes containing a) the truncated gene or b) a hybrid gene that is a fusion of i) the truncated gene and ii) the neo gene are each: inserted between the T-DNA border sequences of intermediate plant expression vectors as described in EPA 86/300291.1; fused to transcript formation and polyadenylation signals in the plant expression vectors; placed under the control of the constitutive promoter from cauliflower mosaic virus driving the 35S3 transcript (Hull and Howell, 1987) or the 2' promoter from the TR-DNA of the octopine Ti-plasmid (Velten et al., 1984); and fused to 3' end transcript formation and polyadenylation signals of the octopine synthase gene (Gielen et al., 1984).
- the intermediate plant expression vectors containing the truncated bTS02618A gene, are transferred into the Agrobacterium strain C58C1Rif R (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 821,582; EPA 86/300,291.1) carrying the disarmed Ti-plasmid pGV2260 (Vaeck et al., 1987). Selection for spectinomycin resistance yields cointegrated plasmids, consisting of pGV2260 and the respective intermediate plant expression vectors. Each of these recombinant Agrobacterium strains is then used to transform different cotton plants so that the truncated bTS02618A gene is contained in, and expressed by, different plant cells.
- the insecticidal activity against Lepidoptera of the expression products of the truncated bTS02618A gene in leaves of transformed plants, generated from the transformed plant cells of Example 5, is evaluated by recording the growth rate and mortality of Aprotis and Spodoptera spp. larvae fed on these leaves. These results are compared with the growth rate of larvae fed leaves from untransformed plants. Toxicity assays against Agrotis and Spodoitera spp. are performed as described in EP 0,358,557, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 821,582 and EPA 86/300,291.1.
- a significantly higher mortality rate is obtained among larvae fed on leaves of transformed plants containing the truncated bTS02618A gene and the truncated bTS02618A-neo hybrid gene than among larvae fed the leaves of untransformed plants.
- the transformed plants are also found to resist Ostrinia nubilalis, Mamestra brassica, Heliothis virescens and Plutella xylostella attack by their expression of the BTS02618A protein.
- this invention is not limited to the BTS02617A strain (BCCM-LMG P-12592), the BTS02618A strain (BCCM-LMG P-12593), the BTS02654B strain (BCCM-LMG P-12594) and the BTS02652E (BCCM-LMG P-13493) strain.
- the invention also includes any mutant or variant of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B, and BTS02652E strain which produces crystals, crystal proteins, protoxin or toxin having substantially the same properties, particularly anti-Lepidoptera properties, quite particularly anti-Noctuidae, anti-Yponomeutidae, anti-Gelechiidae and anti-Pyralidae properties, especially anti-Spodoptera, anti-Plutella, anti-Ostrinia, anti-Mamestra; anti-Heliothis, anti-Phthorimaea and anti-Acrotis properties, as the respective BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E crystals or crystal proteins, or the BTS02618A protoxin or toxin.
- This invention also includes the bTS02618A gene and any insecticidally effective parts thereof, like the truncated bTS02618A gene.
- the term "bTS02618A gene" as used herein means the gene isolated from the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain and hybridizing to the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID No. 1 and any equivalent gene encoding a protoxin having substantially the same amino acid sequence and insecticidal activity as the BTS02618A protoxin and preferably containing the partial nucleotide sequences shown in SEQ ID Nos. 2 and 3, or the full sequence shown in SEQ ID No. 4.
- This invention also is not limited to cotton plants transformed with the truncated bTS02618A gene. It includes any plant, such as tomato, tobacco, rapeseed, alfalfa, sunflower, lettuce, potato, corn, rice, soybean, Brassica species, sugar beet and other legumes and vegetables, transformed with an insecticidally effective part of the bTS02618A gene or an equivalent gene such as the bTS02618Aa gene.
- Vectors for transforming corn cells contain chimeric genes encoding a bTS02618A protein or variant thereof (e.g., BTS02618Aa), comprising suitable promoters such as derivatives of the 35S promoter or a promoter from a maize gene, preferably a constitutively expressed maize gene; and suitable 3' end formation sequences such as those of natural maize genes or those derived from the 35S, gene7 or octopine synthase genes (See, Detailed Description and Mogen et al 1990; Wu et al 1993). Increased expression may be obtained when an intron is introduced in the chimeric gene construct (e.g.
- Transgenic corn plants are grown on selective media by inclusion of well known selectable marker genes such as herbicide resistance genes or antibiotic resistance genes as chimeric genes in the transforming DNA. Transgenic corn plants are selected for their transformed phenotype by means of bio-assays on Ostrinia nubilalis larvae. These larvae quickly stop feeding on the bTS02618Aa-transformed corn and cause no major damage to the corn plants.
- This invention is not limited to the use of Agrobacterium tumefaciens Ti-plasmids for transforming plant cells with an insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part.
- Other known techniques for plant cell transformations such as by means of liposomes, by electroporation or by vector systems based on plant viruses or pollen, can be used for transforming monocotyledons and dicotyledons with such a gene part.
- DNA sequences other than those present naturally in the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains and encoding the BTS02618A protoxin and toxin can be used for transforming plants and bacteria.
- the natural DNA sequence of these genes can be modified by: 1) replacing some codons with others that code either for the same or different, preferably the same, amino acids; 2) deleting or adding some codons; and/or 3) reciprocal recombination as described by Ge et al.
- BTS02618A protoxin e.g., toxin
- an artificial bTS02618A gene or gene part of this invention, as described above, having a modified codon usage could be used in certain circumstances instead of a natural insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part in a bTS02618A chimeric gene of this invention for transforming plants.
- DNA recombinants containing all or part of the bTS02618A gene in association with other foreign DNA particularly the DNA of vectors suitable for transforming plants and microorganisms other than E. coli, are encompassed by this invention.
- this invention is not limited to the specific plasmids containing the bTS02618A gene, or parts thereof, that were heretofore described, but rather, this invention encompasses any DNA recombinants containing DNA sequences that are their equivalent.
- the invention relates to all DNA recombinants that include all or part of the bTS02618A gene and that are suitable for transforming microorganisms (e.g., plant associated bacteria such as other Bacillus thurinfiensis strains, Bacillus subtilis, Pseudomonas, and Xanthomonas or yeasts such as Strentomyces cerevisiae) under conditions which enable all or part of the gene to be expressed and to be recoverable from said microorganisms or to be transferred to a plant cell.
- plant associated bacteria such as other Bacillus thurinfiensis strains, Bacillus subtilis, Pseudomonas, and Xanthomonas or yeasts such as Strentomyces cerevisiae
- an artificial DNA sequence encoding substantially the same protein was designed.
- a DNA sequence for the artificial BTS02618A toxin gene was designed, using corn-preferred codons (Murray et al., 1989).
- TA and CG doublets at codon position 2 and 3 were avoided.
- the artificial gene was also corrected for local high GC-content (GC stretches of more than 5 bp were avoided). Also, suitable restriction sites were incorporated throughout the gene. So the final gene did not always use the most preferred corn codons.
- the artificial gene was synthesized on an Applied Biosystems 380B DNA synthesizer using standard cyanoethyl phoshoramidite chemistry.
- the oligonucleotides were gel purified and assembled into full length fragments using known techniques. See also, the method of Davies et al. (1991).
- the artificial toxin gene (SEQ. ID. No. 6) also carried a deletion of codon 2 to codon 43 of the BTS02618A coding sequence, and codon 44 is preceded by an ATG (start) and GCT (Ala) codon, to create a suitable translation initiation context as proposed by Joshi (1987).
- the C-terminal end of the artificial bTS02618A toxin gene contained some codons in addition to the determined minimal toxic gene fragment, because of the presence of a suitable maize translational stop context in this further C-terminal part.
- the chimeric gene construct containing the artificial bTS02618A gene is introduced into corn cells as described above. Most of the corn plants that are regenerated from these cells and that are identified as transformed are insecticidal because of expression of the bTS02618A gene. Northern and Southern analysis of some selected transgenic corn plants show the stable integration of the transgene and the presence of readily detectable levels of BTS02618A mRNA expression. These plants also show good insect control, and the degree of insecticidal activity is linked to the quantity of the Bt protein present in the tissues, as determined by ELISA.
- any method known for transforming corn so that it expresses the BTS02618A protein at sufficient levels can be used to develop insect-resistant corn.
- a new variant of the BTS02618A protein was made.
- the Arg at amino acid position 123 in SEQ ID. No. 6 was replaced with a Lys (the BTS02618Aa protein).
- the Arg at position 123 in SEQ ID. No. 6 was replaced by Ala (the BTS02618Ab protein).
- an artificial gene encoding a BTS02618Aa toxin fragment was designed. Besides N- and C-terminal deletions and the addition of a Met and an Ala codon at positions 1 and 2 (as for the DNA of SEQ ID. No. 6), this gene differs in one codon from the synthetic gene of SEQ ID. No. 6: the Arg codon (CGC) was replaced by a Lys (AAG) codon. The other nucleotides were the same as for the artificial bTS02618A gene of SEQ ID. No. 6. Such a modification was made by PCR-mediated mutagenesis, starting from the bTS02618A artificial gene, using the appropriate primers.
- Corn plants are also transformed with the bTS02618Aa gene, following the procedures described above.
- Selected transformed corn plants expressing the bTS02618Aa gene are insecticidal for Ostrinia nubilalis larvae. It is believed that any method described in the Detailed Description can be used for expressing the above Bt genes in transformed corn plants, either alone or in combination with other Bt genes.
- a particularly preferred candidate is a DNA sequence encoding the CryIAb protein. Following routine procedures, appropriate lines having desired qualities can be selected between the obtained regenerants.
- the BTS02618Aa toxin was found not to inhibit binding of the CryIAb toxin to midgut membrane vesicles of Ostrinia nubilalis.
- the proteins used were: the Lysine mutant of BTS062618A (BTS02618Aa), non-biotinylated; CryIAb, non-biotinylated; and biotinylated (and biologically active) CryIAb .
- All ICPs used were trypsin resistant toxins. The following combinations were tested:
- the membrane was blocked for at least 2 hours in TBS (10 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, pH 7,6) with 0.1% BSA, followed by incubation with a streptavidin-peroxidase conjugate, diluted 1/1000 in TBS-0.1% BSA for 45 minutes. The membrane was washed for 4 times 5 minutes and once for 15 minutes with TBS- 0.2% Tween 20. Between the wash steps, the blot was thoroughly washed under the tap. The membrane was incubated in ECL reagent (Amersham) for 1 minute and was then exposed to X-ray film.
- TBS 10 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, pH 7,6
- streptavidin-peroxidase conjugate diluted 1/1000 in TBS-0.1% BSA for 45 minutes.
- the membrane was washed for 4 times 5 minutes and once for 15 minutes with TBS- 0.2% Tween 20. Between the wash steps, the blot was thoroughly washed under the tap.
- the membrane
- biotinylated CryIAb For the biotinylated CryIAb, a band corresponding to bound toxin was observed on the X-ray film. When biotinylated CryIAb toxin was incubated in the presence of excess CryIAb toxin, no band was observed on the film: as expected, the excess unlabeled toxin had displaced the labeled toxin.
- the BTS02618A protein recognizes a different receptor site in Ostrinia midgut membranes, and can be used in a strategy to delay or prevent the development of insect resistance or to combat insects resistant to the CryIAb toxin, e.g., by expressing the CryIAb and the BTS02618A toxin in a plant. Since both toxins are highly active against a group of major insect pests and apparently recognize different receptor molecules, their use in transgenic plants such as corn and vegetables, provides a supplemental advantage. Corn plants can be transformed with the cryIAb and bTS02618Aa gene with any method available in the art, such as crossing plants expressing either toxin, or any of the methods described in EP publication number 408 403.
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Abstract
Description
______________________________________ Spodoptera littoralis Experiment/Strain LC.sub.50.sup.a LC.sub.95.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b Slope ______________________________________Experiment 1 BTS02618A 2.4 7.7 1.5-3.4 3.2 HD127.sup.c 2.5 168 1.2-7.4 1.0Experiment 2 BTS02618A 1.1 4 0.8-1.6 3.0 HD127 21.2 133.7 14.4-31.9 2.0 ______________________________________ .sup.a 10.sup.5 sporecrystals per cm.sup.2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values .sup.c from the Howard Dulmage collection, housed at the Northern Region Research Center, 1815 North University, Peoria, Ill, USA. The curator is Dr. L. Nakamura.
______________________________________ Spodoptera exigua 1. Crystal/spore mixtures Experiment/Strain LC.sub.50.sup.a LC.sub.95.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b Slope ______________________________________Experiment 1 BTS02618A 1.4 7.9 0.48-3.9 2.2 HD127 8.2 163.5 5.1-15.7 1.3Experiment 2 BTS02618A 1.2 3.56 0.91-1.57 3.5 BTS02617A 0.79 2.12 0.61-1.03 3.81 HD127 3.5 44.2 1.36-11.5* 1.5 Florbac 4.1 53.9 1.5-17.0* 1.47 BTS00170U.sup.c 5.1 46.5 1.83-24.4* 1.71Experiment 3 Javelin.sup.d 23.12 195.7 14.6-56.7 1.77Experiment 4 BTS02618A 1.07 2.91 0.83-1.39 3.8 BTS02617A 0.87 4.7 0.59-1.21 2.22 HD127 4.7 56.9 1.85-18.7* 1.52 Florbac.sup.e 2.53 48.1 0.79-6.71* 1.29 BTS00170U 1.94 56.3 0.55-5.4* 1.12 ______________________________________ .sup.a 10.sup.5 sporecrystals per cm.sup.2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values, values marked with * are 90% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values .sup.c PCT patent publication WO 90/06999 .sup.d strain isolated from Javelin ® (Sandoz, Lichtstrasse, Basel, Switzerland) .sup.e strain from Florbac ® (Novo Nordisk, Novo Alle, Bagsvaerd, Denmark)
______________________________________ 2. Toxin/protoxin assays. ICP LC.sub.50.sup.a LC.sub.95.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b Slope ______________________________________ BTS02618A Protoxin 26.6 100.6 20.9-33.9 2.8 CryIC Toxin 68.9 313.2 50.5-94.1 2.5 CryID Toxin 118.6 870.6 82.7-170.0 1.9 ______________________________________ .sup.a ng/cm.sup.2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values
______________________________________ Mamestra brassica 1. Crystal/spore mixtures. Experiment/Strain LC.sub.50.sup.a LC.sub.95.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b Slope ______________________________________ HD127 37.8 297.6 17.8-91.1 1.8 BTS0261BA 8.6 59.6 6.0-12.2 1.9 BTS02617A 5.2 25.8 3.7-7.1 2.4 BTS02652E 12.9 44.2 9.7-17.2 3.0 BTS02654B 14.2 60.5 10.8-19.9 2.6 ______________________________________ .sup.a 10.sup.5 sporecrystals per cm.sup.2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values
______________________________________ 2. Protoxin assays. ICP LC.sub.50.sup.a LC.sub.95.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b Slope ______________________________________ BTS02618A Protoxin 25.3 125.1 19.3-33.2 2.4 CryIC Protoxin 22.0 62.9 16.3-29.6 3.6 CryIA(b) Protoxin 162.4 7169 93.2-283.1 1.0 ______________________________________ .sup.a ng/cm.sup.2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values
______________________________________ Agrotis ipsilon 1. Crystal/spore mixtures. Strain mortality.sup.a genes.sup.b ______________________________________ Btgall..sup.c 1/20 cryIF, cryIG, cryII, 81kHD127.sup.d 2/20 cryIAa, cryIAb, cryIC, cryID, cryII, 81k BTS02618A 16/20.sup.e cryIAb, cryII,bTS02618A Buffer 1/20 none ______________________________________ .sup.a number of 1st instar larvae killed after 6 days (10.sup.7 sporecrystals per cm.sup.2) .sup.b genes known to be present in these strains .sup.c Btgall. as described by Smulevitch et al (1991) .sup.d HD127 is available at the Howard Dulmage Collection (NRRC, see above) .sup.e surviving larvae show severe growthinhibition
______________________________________ STRAIN LC.sub.50.sup.a LC.sub.95.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b Slope ______________________________________ BTS02618A 84.4 207.9 65.9-109.6 4.2 HD127 >250 BTS02617A 53.4 261.0 27.7--112.3 2.4 ______________________________________ .sup.a 10.sup.6 spores/cm.sup.2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values
______________________________________ 2. Toxin/protoxin assay. ICP LC.sub.50.sup.a LC.sub.95.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b Slope ______________________________________ CryIAc Toxin >1350 BTS02618A Protoxin 212.2 1973 168.1-267.9 1.71 ______________________________________ .sup.a ng/cm.sup.2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values
______________________________________ Heliothis virescens 1. Crystal/spore mixture. Experiment/Strain LC.sub.50.sup.a LC.sub.95.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b Slope ______________________________________ BTS02617A 1.69 14.99 0.67-2.89 1.73 BTS02618A 2.71 25.4 0.88-6.99 1.69 BTS00170U.sup.c 15.1 398.7 8.3-41.2 1.15 Dipel.sup.d 2.99 14.11 1.25-7.76 2.45 ______________________________________ .sup.a 10.sup.3 sporecrystals per cm.sup.2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values .sup.c PCT patent publication WO 90/06999 .sup.d strain isolated from Dipel ™ (Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, Ill., USA)
______________________________________ 2. Toxin/protoxin assay. ICP LC.sub.50.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b LC.sub.95.sup.a Slope ______________________________________ BTS02618A Protoxin 31.6 20-50 182.7 2.1 CryIAb Toxin 7.2 4.9-10.5 169.1 1.2 ______________________________________ .sup.a ng/cm2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values
______________________________________ Ostrinia nubilalis 1. Crystal/spore mixtures. Experiment/Strain LC.sub.50.sup.a LC.sub.95.sup.a FL.sub.min-max.sup.b Slope ______________________________________ BTS02617A 4.92 12.49 2.45-6.81 4.0 BTS02618A 6.17 39.7 2.93-9.74 2.0 Dipel.sup.c >30 ______________________________________ .sup.a 10.sup.5 sporecrystals per cm.sup.2 .sup.b 95% fiducial limits of LC.sub.50 values .sup.c strain isolated from Dipel ™ (Abbot Laboratories)
______________________________________ 2. Purified protoxin assay ICP 100% Mortality.sup.a ______________________________________ CryIAb Toxin 1350 CryIB Toxin 1350 BTS02618A Protoxin 100 ______________________________________ .sup.a concentration at which 100% mortality was observed (in ng/cm.sup.2
______________________________________ 2618A IAb IAc IB IC IF ______________________________________ S. exigua + +/- - - + + S. littoralis + - - - + NA H. virescens + + + - +/- + A. ipsilon + NA - NA NA NA O. nubilalis + + + NA NA + P. xylostella + + + + + NA M. brassica + + - - + NA ______________________________________
______________________________________ Strain LC.sub.50 LC.sub.95 F195min-max Slope ______________________________________ Bt kurstaki HD-1 8.9 91.2 3.9-15.4 1.6 ± 0.4 HD-1/1 0.4 1.7 0.1-0.6 2.5 ± 0.7 (bTS02618A) HD-1/2 0.4 0.93 0.2-0.5 4.3 ± 1.2 (bTS02618A) BTS02618A 1.5 4.3 0.9-2.1 3.6 ± 0.9 ______________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________ SEQUENCE LISTING (1) GENERAL INFORMATION: (iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 9 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 1: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 19 base pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: misc.sub.-- feature (B) LOCATION: 1..19 (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /function="for isolating bTS02618A gene from its containing strain" /note= "the probe is a part of the coding DNA strand of the cryIG gene (Smulevitch et al. (1991)" (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 1: TTCTGTACTATTGATTGTA19 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 2: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 1561 base pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE: (A) ORGANISM: Bacillus thuringiensis (B) STRAIN: BTS02618A (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: misc.sub.-- feature (B) LOCATION: 1..1561 (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note= "contains the translation initiation codon of the bTS02618A gene" (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 2: AAAAAGAAATAGGAATAAATACTATCCATTTTTTCAAGAAATATTTTTTTATTAGAAAGG60 AATCTTTCTTACACGGGAAAATCCTAAGATTGAGAGTAAAGATATATATATATAAATACA120 ATAAAGAGTTTGTCAGGATTTTTGAAAGATATGATATGAACATGCACTAGATTTATAGTA180 TAGGAGGAAAAAGTATGAATCGAAATAATCAAAATGAATATGAAATTATTGATGCCCCCC240 ATTGTGGGTGTCCATCAGATGACGATGTGAGGTATCCTTTGGCAAGTGACCCAAATGCAG300 CGTTACAAAATATGAACTATAAAGATTACTTACAAATGACAGATGAGGACTACACTGATT360 CTTATATAAATCCTAGTTTATCTATTAGTGGTAGAGATGCAGTTCAGACTGCGCTTACTG420 TTGTTGGGAGAATACTCGGGGCTTTAGGTGTTCCGTTTTCTGGACAAATAGTGAGTTTTT480 ATCAATTCCTTTTAAATACACTGTGGCCAGTTAATGATACAGCTATATGGGAAGCTTTCA540 TGCGACAGGTGGAGGAACTTGTCAATCAACAAATAACAGAATTTGCAAGAAATCAGGCAC600 TTGCAAGATTGCAAGGATTAGGAGACTCTTTTAATGTATATCAACGTTCCCTTCAAAATT660 GGTTGGCTGATCGAAATGATACACGAAATTTAAGTGTTGTTCGTGCTNAATTTATAGCTT720 TAGACCTTGATTTTGTTAATGCTATTCCATTGTTTGCAGTAAATGGACAGCAGGTTCCAT780 TACTGTCAGTATATGCACAAGCTGTGAATTTACATTTGTTATTATTAAAAGATGCATCTC840 TTTTTGGAGAAGGATGGGGATTCACACAGGGGGAAATTTCCACATATTATGACCGTCAAT900 TGGAACTAACCGCTAAGTACACTAATTACTGTGAAACTTGGTATAATACAGGTTTAGATC960 GTTTAAGAGGAACAAATACTGAAAGTTGGTTAAGATATCATCAATTCCGTAGAGAAATGA1020 CTTTAGTGGTATTAGATGTTGTGGCGCTATTTCCATATTATGATGTACGACTTTATCCAA1080 CGGGATCAAACCCACAGCTTACACGTGAGGTATATACAGATCCGATTGTATTTAATCCAC1140 CAGCTAATGTTGGACTTTGCCGACGTTGGGGTACTAATCCCTATAATACTTTTTCTGAGC1200 TCGAAAATGCCTTCATTCGCCCACCACATCTTTTTGATAGGCTGAATAGCTTAACAATCA1260 GCAGTAATCGATTTCCAGTTTCATCTAATTTTATGGATTATTGGTCAGGACATACGTTAC1320 GCCGTAGTTATCTGAACGATTCAGCAGTACAAGAAGATAGTTATGGCCTAATTACAACCA1380 CAAGAGCAACAATTAATCCCGGAGTTGATGGAACAAACCGCATAGAGTCAACGGCAGTAG1440 ATTTTCGTTCTGCATTGATAGGTATATATGGCGTGAATAGAGCTTCTTTTGTCCCAGGAG1500 GCTTGTTTAATGGTACGACTTCTCCTGCTAATGGAGGATGTAGAGATCTCTATGATACAA1560 A1561 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 3: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 1554 base pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE: (A) ORGANISM: Bacillus thuringiensis (B) STRAIN: BTS02618A (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: misc.sub.-- feature (B) LOCATION: 1146..1148 (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /function="Presumed translational stop codon of bTS02618A gene" (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 3: AAAATTATCCAACATACATTTATCAAAAAGTAGATGCATCGGTGTTAAAGCCTTATACAC60 GCTATAGACTAGATGGATTTGTGAAGNGTAGTCAAGATTTAGAAATTGATCTCATCCACC120 ATCATAAAGTCCATCTTGTAAAAAATGTACCAGATAATTTAGTATCTGATACTTACTCAG180 ATGGTTCTTGCAGCGGAATCAACCGTTGTGATGAACAGCATCAGGTAGATATGCAGCTAG240 ATGCGGAGCATCATCCAATGGATTGCTGTGAAGCGGCTCAAACACATGAGTTTTCTTCCT300 ATATTAATACAGGGGATCTAAATGCAAGTGTAGATCAGGGCATTTGGGTTGTATTAAAAG360 TTCGAACAACAGATGGGTATGCGACGTTAGGAAATCTTGAATTGGTAGAGGTTGGGCCAT420 TATCGGGTGAATCTCTAGAACGGGAACAAAGAGATAATGCGAAATGGAATGCAGAGCTAG480 GAAGAAAACGTGCAGAAATAGATCGTGTGTATTTAGCTGCGAAACAAGCAATTAATCATC540 TGTTTGTAGACTATCAAGATCAACAATTAAATCCAGAAATTGGGCTAGCAGAAATTAATG600 AAGCTTCAAATCTTGTAGAGTCAATTTCGGGTGTATATAGTGATACACTATTACAGATTC660 CTGGGATTAACTACGAAATTTACACAGAGTTATCCGATCGCTTACAACAAGCATCGTATC720 TGTATACGTCTAGAAATGCGGTGCAAAATGGAGACTTTAACAGTGGTCTAGATAGTTGGA780 ATACAACTATGGATGCATCGGTTCAGCAAGATGGCAATATGCATTTCTTAGTTCTTTCGC840 ATTGGGATGCACAAGTTTCCCAACAATTGAGAGTAAATCCGAATTGTAAGTATGTCTTAC900 GTGTGACAGCAAGAAAAGTAGGAGGCGGAGATGGATACGTCACAATCCGAGATGGCGCTC960 ATCACCAAGAAACTCTTACATTTAATGCATGTGACTACGATGTAAATGGTACGTATGTCA1020 ATGACAATTCGTATATAACAGAAGAAGTGGTATTCTACCCAGAGACAAAACATATGTGGG1080 TAGAGGTGAGTGAATCCGAAGGTTCATTCTATATAGACAGTATTGAGTTTATTGAAACAC1140 AAGAGTAGAAGAGGGGGATCCTAACGTATAGCAACTATGAGAGGATACTCCGTACAAACA1200 AAGATTAAAAAAAGGTAAAATGAATAGAACCCCCTACTGGTAGAAGGACCGATAGGGGGT1260 TCTTACATGAAAAAATGTAGCTGTTTACTAAGGTGTATAAAAAACAGCATATCTGATAGA1320 AAAAAGTGAGTACCTTATAAAGAAAGAATTCCATTCACAGTTTCGGTATCATATAAATAA1380 TGATAGGGGTATCCTTCTTATTTACATTATTTTTCGCAATTATCTCGACGTTCTTCTTTC1440 CGCTCACAATGATGATGATCATGACAACAATCGCGTCCATAGCGAACTCTTTCGATATTA1500 ATAATATCTAAACTCGTGTAGCAGTCATTTCCATTTTTTTTGATCCAGTAAATA1554 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 4: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 4344 base pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: CDS (B) LOCATION: 668..4141 (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: misc.sub.-- feature (B) LOCATION: 1..4344 (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note= "encompasses entire sequence of SEQ ID NO (SID) 2: from nt position 474 to 2034 in SID 4" (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: misc.sub.-- feature (B) LOCATION: 1..4344 (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note= "also encompasses part of the sequence of SID 3: from nt position 2994 to 4344 in SID 4" (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: misc.sub.-- feature (B) LOCATION: 1..4344 (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note= "SID 3 shows additional nucleotides, located 3'from the sequence shown in SID 4 (1352- 1554 in SID 4)" (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 4: GAATTCGAGCTCGGTACCTTTTCAGTGTATCGTTTCCCTTCCATCAGGTTTTCAAATTGA60 AAAGCCGAATGATTTGAAACTTGTTTACGATGTAAGTCATTTGTCTATGACGAAAGATAC120 GTGTAAAAAACGTATTGAGATTGATGAATGTGGACAAGTAGAAATTGACTTACAAGTATT180 AAAGATTAAGGGTGTCCTTTCTTTTATCGGAAATTTCTCTATTGAACCTATTCTGTGTGA240 AAACATGTATACAACGGTTGATAGAGATCCGTCTATTTCCTTAAGTTTCCAAGATACGGT300 ATATGTGGACCATATTTTAAAATATAGCGTCCAACAACTACCATATTATGTAATTGATGG360 TGATCATATTCAAGTACGTGATTTACAAATCAAACTGATGAAAGAGAATCCGCAATCTGC420 TCAAGTATCAGGTTTGTTTTGTTTTGTATATGAGTAAGAACCGAAGGTTTGTAAAAAAGA480 AATAGGAATAAATACTATCCATTTTTTCAAGAAATATTTTTTTATTAGAAAGGAATCTTT540 CTTACACGGGAAAATCCTAAGATTGAGAGTAAAGATATATATATATAAATACAATAAAGA600 GTTTGTCAGGATTTTTGAAAGATATGATATGAACATGCACTAGATTTATAGTATAGGAGG660 AAAAAGTATGAATCGAAATAATCAAAATGAATATGAAATTATTGATGCC709 MetAsnArgAsnAsnGlnAsnGluTyrGluIleIleAspAla 1510 CCCCATTGTGGGTGTCCATCAGATGACGATGTGAGGTATCCTTTGGCA757 ProHisCysGlyCysProSerAspAspAspValArgTyrProLeuAla 15202530 AGTGACCCAAATGCAGCGTTACAAAATATGAACTATAAAGATTACTTA805 SerAspProAsnAlaAlaLeuGlnAsnMetAsnTyrLysAspTyrLeu 354045 CAAATGACAGATGAGGACTACACTGATTCTTATATAAATCCTAGTTTA853 GlnMetThrAspGluAspTyrThrAspSerTyrIleAsnProSerLeu 505560 TCTATTAGTGGTAGAGATGCAGTTCAGACTGCGCTTACTGTTGTTGGG901 SerIleSerGlyArgAspAlaValGlnThrAlaLeuThrValValGly 657075 AGAATACTCGGGGCTTTAGGTGTTCCGTTTTCTGGACAAATAGTGAGT949 ArgIleLeuGlyAlaLeuGlyValProPheSerGlyGlnIleValSer 808590 TTTTATCAATTCCTTTTAAATACACTGTGGCCAGTTAATGATACAGCT997 PheTyrGlnPheLeuLeuAsnThrLeuTrpProValAsnAspThrAla 95100105110 ATATGGGAAGCTTTCATGCGACAGGTGGAGGAACTTGTCAATCAACAA1045 IleTrpGluAlaPheMetArgGlnValGluGluLeuValAsnGlnGln 115120125 ATAACAGAATTTGCAAGAAATCAGGCACTTGCAAGATTGCAAGGATTA1093 IleThrGluPheAlaArgAsnGlnAlaLeuAlaArgLeuGlnGlyLeu 130135140 GGAGACTCTTTTAATGTATATCAACGTTCCCTTCAAAATTGGTTGGCT1141 GlyAspSerPheAsnValTyrGlnArgSerLeuGlnAsnTrpLeuAla 145150155 GATCGAAATGATACACGAAATTTAAGTGTTGTTCGTGCTCAATTTATA1189 AspArgAsnAspThrArgAsnLeuSerValValArgAlaGlnPheIle 160165170 GCTTTAGACCTTGATTTTGTTAATGCTATTCCATTGTTTGCAGTAAAT1237 AlaLeuAspLeuAspPheValAsnAlaIleProLeuPheAlaValAsn 175180185190 GGACAGCAGGTTCCATTACTGTCAGTATATGCACAAGCTGTGAATTTA1285 GlyGlnGlnValProLeuLeuSerValTyrAlaGlnAlaValAsnLeu 195200205 CATTTGTTATTATTAAAAGATGCATCTCTTTTTGGAGAAGGATGGGGA1333 HisLeuLeuLeuLeuLysAspAlaSerLeuPheGlyGluGlyTrpGly 210215220 TTCACACAGGGGGAAATTTCCACATATTATGACCGTCAATTGGAACTA1381 PheThrGlnGlyGluIleSerThrTyrTyrAspArgGlnLeuGluLeu 225230235 ACCGCTAAGTACACTAATTACTGTGAAACTTGGTATAATACAGGTTTA1429 ThrAlaLysTyrThrAsnTyrCysGluThrTrpTyrAsnThrGlyLeu 240245250 GATCGTTTAAGAGGAACAAATACTGAAAGTTGGTTAAGATATCATCAA1477 AspArgLeuArgGlyThrAsnThrGluSerTrpLeuArgTyrHisGln 255260265270 TTCCGTAGAGAAATGACTTTAGTGGTATTAGATGTTGTGGCGCTATTT1525 PheArgArgGluMetThrLeuValValLeuAspValValAlaLeuPhe 275280285 CCATATTATGATGTACGACTTTATCCAACGGGATCAAACCCACAGCTT1573 ProTyrTyrAspValArgLeuTyrProThrGlySerAsnProGlnLeu 290295300 ACACGTGAGGTATATACAGATCCGATTGTATTTAATCCACCAGCTAAT1621 ThrArgGluValTyrThrAspProIleValPheAsnProProAlaAsn 305310315 GTTGGACTTTGCCGACGTTGGGGTACTAATCCCTATAATACTTTTTCT1669 ValGlyLeuCysArgArgTrpGlyThrAsnProTyrAsnThrPheSer 320325330 GAGCTCGAAAATGCCTTCATTCGCCCACCACATCTTTTTGATAGGCTG1717 GluLeuGluAsnAlaPheIleArgProProHisLeuPheAspArgLeu 335340345350 AATAGCTTAACAATCAGCAGTAATCGATTTCCAGTTTCATCTAATTTT1765 AsnSerLeuThrIleSerSerAsnArgPheProValSerSerAsnPhe 355360365 ATGGATTATTGGTCAGGACATACGTTACGCCGTAGTTATCTGAACGAT1813 MetAspTyrTrpSerGlyHisThrLeuArgArgSerTyrLeuAsnAsp 370375380 TCAGCAGTACAAGAAGATAGTTATGGCCTAATTACAACCACAAGAGCA1861 SerAlaValGlnGluAspSerTyrGlyLeuIleThrThrThrArgAla 385390395 ACAATTAATCCCGGAGTTGATGGAACAAACCGCATAGAGTCAACGGCA1909 ThrIleAsnProGlyValAspGlyThrAsnArgIleGluSerThrAla 400405410 GTAGATTTTCGTTCTGCATTGATAGGTATATATGGCGTGAATAGAGCT1957 ValAspPheArgSerAlaLeuIleGlyIleTyrGlyValAsnArgAla 415420425430 TCTTTTGTCCCAGGAGGCTTGTTTAATGGTACGACTTCTCCTGCTAAT2005 SerPheValProGlyGlyLeuPheAsnGlyThrThrSerProAlaAsn 435440445 GGAGGATGTAGAGATCTCTATGATACAAATGATGAATTACCACCAGAT2053 GlyGlyCysArgAspLeuTyrAspThrAsnAspGluLeuProProAsp 450455460 GAAAGTACCGGAAGTTCAACCCATAGACTATCTCATGTTACCTTTTTT2101 GluSerThrGlySerSerThrHisArgLeuSerHisValThrPhePhe 465470475 AGCTTTCAAACTAATCAGGCTGGATCTATAGCTAATGCAGGAAGTGTA2149 SerPheGlnThrAsnGlnAlaGlySerIleAlaAsnAlaGlySerVal 480485490 CCTACTTATGTTTGGACCCGTCGTGATGTGGACCTTAATAATACGATT2197 ProThrTyrValTrpThrArgArgAspValAspLeuAsnAsnThrIle 495500505510 ACCCCAAATAGAATTACACAATTACCATTGGTAAAGGCATCTGCACCT2245 ThrProAsnArgIleThrGlnLeuProLeuValLysAlaSerAlaPro 515520525 GTTTCGGGTACTACGGTCTTAAAAGGTCCAGGATTTACAGGAGGGGGT2293 ValSerGlyThrThrValLeuLysGlyProGlyPheThrGlyGlyGly 530535540 ATACTCCGAAGAACAACTAATGGCACATTTGGAACGTTAAGAGTAACG2341 IleLeuArgArgThrThrAsnGlyThrPheGlyThrLeuArgValThr 545550555 GTTAATTCACCATTAACACAACAATATCGCCTAAGAGTTCGTTTTGCC2389 ValAsnSerProLeuThrGlnGlnTyrArgLeuArgValArgPheAla 560565570 TCAACAGGAAATTTCAGTATAAGGGTACTCCGTGGAGGGGTTTCTATC2437 SerThrGlyAsnPheSerIleArgValLeuArgGlyGlyValSerIle 575580585590 GGTGATGTTAGATTAGGGAGCACAATGAACAGAGGGCAGGAACTAACT2485 GlyAspValArgLeuGlySerThrMetAsnArgGlyGlnGluLeuThr 595600605 TACGAATCCTTTTTCACAAGAGAGTTTACTACTACTGGTCCGTTCAAT2533 TyrGluSerPhePheThrArgGluPheThrThrThrGlyProPheAsn 610615620 CCGCCTTTTACATTTACACAAGCTCAAGAGATTCTAACAGTGAATGCA2581 ProProPheThrPheThrGlnAlaGlnGluIleLeuThrValAsnAla 625630635 GAAGGTGTTAGCACCGGTGGTGAATATTATATAGATAGAATTGAAATT2629 GluGlyValSerThrGlyGlyGluTyrTyrIleAspArgIleGluIle 640645650 GTCCCTGTGAATCCGGCACGAGAAGCGGAAGAGGATTTAGAAGCGGCG2677 ValProValAsnProAlaArgGluAlaGluGluAspLeuGluAlaAla 655660665670 AAGAAAGCGGTGGCGAGCTTGTTTACACGTACAAGGGACGGATTACAG2725 LysLysAlaValAlaSerLeuPheThrArgThrArgAspGlyLeuGln 675680685 GTAAATGTGACAGATTATCAAGTGGACCAAGCGGCAAATTTAGTGTCA2773 ValAsnValThrAspTyrGlnValAspGlnAlaAlaAsnLeuValSer 690695700 TGCTTATCCGATGAACAATATGGGCATGACAAAAAGATGTTATTGGAA2821 CysLeuSerAspGluGlnTyrGlyHisAspLysLysMetLeuLeuGlu 705710715 GCGGTAAGAGCGGCAAAACGCCTCAGCCGCGAACGCAACTTACTTCAA2869 AlaValArgAlaAlaLysArgLeuSerArgGluArgAsnLeuLeuGln 720725730 GATCCAGATTTTAATACAATCAATAGTACAGAAGAGAATGGCTGGAAG2917 AspProAspPheAsnThrIleAsnSerThrGluGluAsnGlyTrpLys 735740745750 GCAAGTAACGGTGTTACTATTAGCGAGGGCGGTCCATTCTTTAAAGGT2965 AlaSerAsnGlyValThrIleSerGluGlyGlyProPhePheLysGly 755760765 CGTGCACTTCAGTTAGCAAGCGCAAGAGAAAATTATCCAACATACATT3013 ArgAlaLeuGlnLeuAlaSerAlaArgGluAsnTyrProThrTyrIle 770775780 TATCAAAAAGTAGATGCATCGGTGTTAAAGCCTTATACACGCTATAGA3061 TyrGlnLysValAspAlaSerValLeuLysProTyrThrArgTyrArg 785790795 CTAGATGGATTTGTGAAGAGTAGTCAAGATTTAGAAATTGATCTCATC3109 LeuAspGlyPheValLysSerSerGlnAspLeuGluIleAspLeuIle 800805810 CACCATCATAAAGTCCATCTTGTAAAAAATGTACCAGATAATTTAGTA3157 HisHisHisLysValHisLeuValLysAsnValProAspAsnLeuVal 815820825830 TCTGATACTTACTCAGATGGTTCTTGCAGCGGAATCAACCGTTGTGAT3205 SerAspThrTyrSerAspGlySerCysSerGlyIleAsnArgCysAsp 835840845 GAACAGCATCAGGTAGATATGCAGCTAGATGCGGAGCATCATCCAATG3253 GluGlnHisGlnValAspMetGlnLeuAspAlaGluHisHisProMet 850855860 GATTGCTGTGAAGCGGCTCAAACACATGAGTTTTCTTCCTATATTAAT3301 AspCysCysGluAlaAlaGlnThrHisGluPheSerSerTyrIleAsn 865870875 ACAGGGGATCTAAATGCAAGTGTAGATCAGGGCATTTGGGTTGTATTA3349 ThrGlyAspLeuAsnAlaSerValAspGlnGlyIleTrpValValLeu 880885890 AAAGTTCGAACAACAGATGGGTATGCGACGTTAGGAAATCTTGAATTG3397 LysValArgThrThrAspGlyTyrAlaThrLeuGlyAsnLeuGluLeu 895900905910 GTAGAGGTTGGGCCATTATCGGGTGAATCTCTAGAACGGGAACAAAGA3445 ValGluValGlyProLeuSerGlyGluSerLeuGluArgGluGlnArg 915920925 GATAATGCGAAATGGAATGCAGAGCTAGGAAGAAAACGTGCAGAAATA3493 AspAsnAlaLysTrpAsnAlaGluLeuGlyArgLysArgAlaGluIle 930935940 GATCGTGTGTATTTAGCTGCGAAACAAGCAATTAATCATCTGTTTGTA3541 AspArgValTyrLeuAlaAlaLysGlnAlaIleAsnHisLeuPheVal 945950955 GACTATCAAGATCAACAATTAAATCCAGAAATTGGGCTAGCAGAAATT3589 AspTyrGlnAspGlnGlnLeuAsnProGluIleGlyLeuAlaGluIle 960965970 AATGAAGCTTCAAATCTTGTAGAGTCAATTTCGGGTGTATATAGTGAT3637 AsnGluAlaSerAsnLeuValGluSerIleSerGlyValTyrSerAsp 975980985990 ACACTATTACAGATTCCTGGGATTAACTACGAAATTTACACAGAGTTA3685 ThrLeuLeuGlnIleProGlyIleAsnTyrGluIleTyrThrGluLeu 99510001005 TCCGATCGCTTACAACAAGCATCGTATCTGTATACGTCTAGAAATGCG3733 SerAspArgLeuGlnGlnAlaSerTyrLeuTyrThrSerArgAsnAla 101010151020 GTGCAAAATGGAGACTTTAACAGTGGTCTAGATAGTTGGAATACAACT3781 ValGlnAsnGlyAspPheAsnSerGlyLeuAspSerTrpAsnThrThr 102510301035 ATGGATGCATCGGTTCAGCAAGATGGCAATATGCATTTCTTAGTTCTT3829 MetAspAlaSerValGlnGlnAspGlyAsnMetHisPheLeuValLeu 104010451050 TCGCATTGGGATGCACAAGTTTCCCAACAATTGAGAGTAAATCCGAAT3877 SerHisTrpAspAlaGlnValSerGlnGlnLeuArgValAsnProAsn 1055106010651070 TGTAAGTATGTCTTACGTGTGACAGCAAGAAAAGTAGGAGGCGGAGAT3925 CysLysTyrValLeuArgValThrAlaArgLysValGlyGlyGlyAsp 107510801085 GGATACGTCACAATCCGAGATGGCGCTCATCACCAAGAAACTCTTACA3973 GlyTyrValThrIleArgAspGlyAlaHisHisGlnGluThrLeuThr 109010951100 TTTAATGCATGTGACTACGATGTAAATGGTACGTATGTCAATGACAAT4021 PheAsnAlaCysAspTyrAspValAsnGlyThrTyrValAsnAspAsn 110511101115 TCGTATATAACAGAAGAAGTGGTATTCTACCCAGAGACAAAACATATG4069 SerTyrIleThrGluGluValValPheTyrProGluThrLysHisMet 112011251130 TGGGTAGAGGTGAGTGAATCCGAAGGTTCATTCTATATAGACAGTATT4117 TrpValGluValSerGluSerGluGlySerPheTyrIleAspSerIle 1135114011451150 GAGTTTATTGAAACACAAGAGTAGAAGAGGGGGATCCTAACGTATAGCAAC4168 GluPheIleGluThrGlnGlu 1155 TATGAGAGGATACTCCGTACAAACAAAGATTAAAAAAAGGTAAAATGAATAGAACCCCCT4228 ACTGGTAGAAGGACCGATAGGGGGTTCTTACATGAAAAAATGTAGCTGTTTACTAAGGTG4288 TATAAAAAACAGCATATCTGATAGAAAAAAGTGAGTACCTTATAAAGAAAGAATTC4344 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 5: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 1157 amino acids (B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 5: MetAsnArgAsnAsnGlnAsnGluTyrGluIleIleAspAlaProHis 151015 CysGlyCysProSerAspAspAspValArgTyrProLeuAlaSerAsp 202530 ProAsnAlaAlaLeuGlnAsnMetAsnTyrLysAspTyrLeuGlnMet 354045 ThrAspGluAspTyrThrAspSerTyrIleAsnProSerLeuSerIle 505560 SerGlyArgAspAlaValGlnThrAlaLeuThrValValGlyArgIle 65707580 LeuGlyAlaLeuGlyValProPheSerGlyGlnIleValSerPheTyr 859095 GlnPheLeuLeuAsnThrLeuTrpProValAsnAspThrAlaIleTrp 100105110 GluAlaPheMetArgGlnValGluGluLeuValAsnGlnGlnIleThr 115120125 GluPheAlaArgAsnGlnAlaLeuAlaArgLeuGlnGlyLeuGlyAsp 130135140 SerPheAsnValTyrGlnArgSerLeuGlnAsnTrpLeuAlaAspArg 145150155160 AsnAspThrArgAsnLeuSerValValArgAlaGlnPheIleAlaLeu 165170175 AspLeuAspPheValAsnAlaIleProLeuPheAlaValAsnGlyGln 180185190 GlnValProLeuLeuSerValTyrAlaGlnAlaValAsnLeuHisLeu 195200205 LeuLeuLeuLysAspAlaSerLeuPheGlyGluGlyTrpGlyPheThr 210215220 GlnGlyGluIleSerThrTyrTyrAspArgGlnLeuGluLeuThrAla 225230235240 LysTyrThrAsnTyrCysGluThrTrpTyrAsnThrGlyLeuAspArg 245250255 LeuArgGlyThrAsnThrGluSerTrpLeuArgTyrHisGlnPheArg 260265270 ArgGluMetThrLeuValValLeuAspValValAlaLeuPheProTyr 275280285 TyrAspValArgLeuTyrProThrGlySerAsnProGlnLeuThrArg 290295300 GluValTyrThrAspProIleValPheAsnProProAlaAsnValGly 305310315320 LeuCysArgArgTrpGlyThrAsnProTyrAsnThrPheSerGluLeu 325330335 GluAsnAlaPheIleArgProProHisLeuPheAspArgLeuAsnSer 340345350 LeuThrIleSerSerAsnArgPheProValSerSerAsnPheMetAsp 355360365 TyrTrpSerGlyHisThrLeuArgArgSerTyrLeuAsnAspSerAla 370375380 ValGlnGluAspSerTyrGlyLeuIleThrThrThrArgAlaThrIle 385390395400 AsnProGlyValAspGlyThrAsnArgIleGluSerThrAlaValAsp 405410415 PheArgSerAlaLeuIleGlyIleTyrGlyValAsnArgAlaSerPhe 420425430 ValProGlyGlyLeuPheAsnGlyThrThrSerProAlaAsnGlyGly 435440445 CysArgAspLeuTyrAspThrAsnAspGluLeuProProAspGluSer 450455460 ThrGlySerSerThrHisArgLeuSerHisValThrPhePheSerPhe 465470475480 GlnThrAsnGlnAlaGlySerIleAlaAsnAlaGlySerValProThr 485490495 TyrValTrpThrArgArgAspValAspLeuAsnAsnThrIleThrPro 500505510 AsnArgIleThrGlnLeuProLeuValLysAlaSerAlaProValSer 515520525 GlyThrThrValLeuLysGlyProGlyPheThrGlyGlyGlyIleLeu 530535540 ArgArgThrThrAsnGlyThrPheGlyThrLeuArgValThrValAsn 545550555560 SerProLeuThrGlnGlnTyrArgLeuArgValArgPheAlaSerThr 565570575 GlyAsnPheSerIleArgValLeuArgGlyGlyValSerIleGlyAsp 580585590 ValArgLeuGlySerThrMetAsnArgGlyGlnGluLeuThrTyrGlu 595600605 SerPhePheThrArgGluPheThrThrThrGlyProPheAsnProPro 610615620 PheThrPheThrGlnAlaGlnGluIleLeuThrValAsnAlaGluGly 625630635640 ValSerThrGlyGlyGluTyrTyrIleAspArgIleGluIleValPro 645650655 ValAsnProAlaArgGluAlaGluGluAspLeuGluAlaAlaLysLys 660665670 AlaValAlaSerLeuPheThrArgThrArgAspGlyLeuGlnValAsn 675680685 ValThrAspTyrGlnValAspGlnAlaAlaAsnLeuValSerCysLeu 690695700 SerAspGluGlnTyrGlyHisAspLysLysMetLeuLeuGluAlaVal 705710715720 ArgAlaAlaLysArgLeuSerArgGluArgAsnLeuLeuGlnAspPro 725730735 AspPheAsnThrIleAsnSerThrGluGluAsnGlyTrpLysAlaSer 740745750 AsnGlyValThrIleSerGluGlyGlyProPhePheLysGlyArgAla 755760765 LeuGlnLeuAlaSerAlaArgGluAsnTyrProThrTyrIleTyrGln 770775780 LysValAspAlaSerValLeuLysProTyrThrArgTyrArgLeuAsp 785790795800 GlyPheValLysSerSerGlnAspLeuGluIleAspLeuIleHisHis 805810815 HisLysValHisLeuValLysAsnValProAspAsnLeuValSerAsp 820825830 ThrTyrSerAspGlySerCysSerGlyIleAsnArgCysAspGluGln 835840845 HisGlnValAspMetGlnLeuAspAlaGluHisHisProMetAspCys 850855860 CysGluAlaAlaGlnThrHisGluPheSerSerTyrIleAsnThrGly 865870875880 AspLeuAsnAlaSerValAspGlnGlyIleTrpValValLeuLysVal 885890895 ArgThrThrAspGlyTyrAlaThrLeuGlyAsnLeuGluLeuValGlu 900905910 ValGlyProLeuSerGlyGluSerLeuGluArgGluGlnArgAspAsn 915920925 AlaLysTrpAsnAlaGluLeuGlyArgLysArgAlaGluIleAspArg 930935940 ValTyrLeuAlaAlaLysGlnAlaIleAsnHisLeuPheValAspTyr 945950955960 GlnAspGlnGlnLeuAsnProGluIleGlyLeuAlaGluIleAsnGlu 965970975 AlaSerAsnLeuValGluSerIleSerGlyValTyrSerAspThrLeu 980985990 LeuGlnIleProGlyIleAsnTyrGluIleTyrThrGluLeuSerAsp 99510001005 ArgLeuGlnGlnAlaSerTyrLeuTyrThrSerArgAsnAlaValGln 101010151020 AsnGlyAspPheAsnSerGlyLeuAspSerTrpAsnThrThrMetAsp 1025103010351040 AlaSerValGlnGlnAspGlyAsnMetHisPheLeuValLeuSerHis 104510501055 TrpAspAlaGlnValSerGlnGlnLeuArgValAsnProAsnCysLys 106010651070 TyrValLeuArgValThrAlaArgLysValGlyGlyGlyAspGlyTyr 107510801085 ValThrIleArgAspGlyAlaHisHisGlnGluThrLeuThrPheAsn 109010951100 AlaCysAspTyrAspValAsnGlyThrTyrValAsnAspAsnSerTyr 1105111011151120 IleThrGluGluValValPheTyrProGluThrLysHisMetTrpVal 112511301135 GluValSerGluSerGluGlySerPheTyrIleAspSerIleGluPhe 114011451150 IleGluThrGlnGlu 1155 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 6: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 1897 base pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE: (A) ORGANISM: Bacillus thuringiensis (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: CDS (B) LOCATION: 13..1887 (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: misc.sub.-- feature (B) LOCATION: 13..1887 (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note= "artificial DNA sequence of the bTS02618A gene, encoding the BTS02618A protein" (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 6: GGTACCAAAACCATGGCTGACTACCTGCAGATGACCGACGAGGACTAC48 MetAlaAspTyrLeuGlnMetThrAspGluAspTyr 1510 ACCGACAGCTACATCAACCCCAGCCTGAGCATCAGCGGTCGCGACGCC96 ThrAspSerTyrIleAsnProSerLeuSerIleSerGlyArgAspAla 152025 GTGCAGACCGCTCTGACCGTGGTGGGTCGCATCCTGGGTGCCCTGGGC144 ValGlnThrAlaLeuThrValValGlyArgIleLeuGlyAlaLeuGly 303540 GTGCCCTTCAGCGGTCAGATCGTGAGCTTCTACCAGTTCCTGCTGAAC192 ValProPheSerGlyGlnIleValSerPheTyrGlnPheLeuLeuAsn 45505560 ACCCTGTGGCCAGTGAACGACACCGCCATCTGGGAAGCTTTCATGCGC240 ThrLeuTrpProValAsnAspThrAlaIleTrpGluAlaPheMetArg 657075 CAGGTGGAGGAGCTGGTGAACCAGCAGATCACCGAGTTCGCTCGCAAC288 GlnValGluGluLeuValAsnGlnGlnIleThrGluPheAlaArgAsn 808590 CAGGCCCTGGCTCGCCTGCAGGGCCTGGGCGACAGCTTCAACGTGTAC336 GlnAlaLeuAlaArgLeuGlnGlyLeuGlyAspSerPheAsnValTyr 95100105 CAGCGCAGCCTGCAGAACTGGCTGGCCGACCGCAACGACACCCGCAAC384 GlnArgSerLeuGlnAsnTrpLeuAlaAspArgAsnAspThrArgAsn 110115120 CTGAGCGTGGTGAGGGCCCAGTTCATCGCCCTGGACCTGGACTTCGTG432 LeuSerValValArgAlaGlnPheIleAlaLeuAspLeuAspPheVal 125130135140 AACGCCATCCCCCTGTTCGCCGTGAACGGCCAGCAGGTGCCCCTGCTG480 AsnAlaIleProLeuPheAlaValAsnGlyGlnGlnValProLeuLeu 145150155 AGCGTGTACGCCCAGGCCGTGAACCTGCACCTGCTGCTGCTGAAGGAT528 SerValTyrAlaGlnAlaValAsnLeuHisLeuLeuLeuLeuLysAsp 160165170 GCATCCCTGTTCGGCGAGGGCTGGGGCTTCACCCAGGGCGAGATCAGC576 AlaSerLeuPheGlyGluGlyTrpGlyPheThrGlnGlyGluIleSer 175180185 ACCTACTACGACCGCCAGCTCGAGCTGACCGCCAAGTACACCAACTAC624 ThrTyrTyrAspArgGlnLeuGluLeuThrAlaLysTyrThrAsnTyr 190195200 TGCGAGACCTGGTACAACACCGGTCTGGACCGCCTGAGGGGCACCAAC672 CysGluThrTrpTyrAsnThrGlyLeuAspArgLeuArgGlyThrAsn 205210215220 ACCGAGAGCTGGCTGCGCTACCACCAGTTCCGCAGGGAGATGACCCTG720 ThrGluSerTrpLeuArgTyrHisGlnPheArgArgGluMetThrLeu 225230235 GTGGTGCTGGACGTGGTGGCCCTGTTCCCCTACTACGACGTGCGCCTG768 ValValLeuAspValValAlaLeuPheProTyrTyrAspValArgLeu 240245250 TACCCCACCGGCAGCAACCCCCAGCTGACACGTGAGGTGTACACCGAC816 TyrProThrGlySerAsnProGlnLeuThrArgGluValTyrThrAsp 255260265 CCCATCGTGTTCAACCCACCAGCCAACGTGGGCCTGTGCCGCAGGTGG864 ProIleValPheAsnProProAlaAsnValGlyLeuCysArgArgTrp 270275280 GGCACCAACCCCTACAACACCTTCAGCGAGCTGGAGAACGCCTTCATC912 GlyThrAsnProTyrAsnThrPheSerGluLeuGluAsnAlaPheIle 285290295300 AGGCCACCCCACCTGTTCGACCGCCTGAACAGCCTGACCATCAGCAGC960 ArgProProHisLeuPheAspArgLeuAsnSerLeuThrIleSerSer 305310315 AATCGATTCCCCGTGAGCAGCAACTTCATGGACTACTGGAGCGGTCAC1008 AsnArgPheProValSerSerAsnPheMetAspTyrTrpSerGlyHis 320325330 ACCCTGCGCAGGAGCTACCTGAACGACAGCGCCGTGCAGGAGGACAGC1056 ThrLeuArgArgSerTyrLeuAsnAspSerAlaValGlnGluAspSer 335340345 TACGGCCTGATCACCACCACCAGGGCCACCATCAACCCAGGCGTGGAC1104 TyrGlyLeuIleThrThrThrArgAlaThrIleAsnProGlyValAsp 350355360 GGCACCAACCGCATCGAGAGCACCGCTGTGGACTTCCGCAGCGCTCTG1152 GlyThrAsnArgIleGluSerThrAlaValAspPheArgSerAlaLeu 365370375380 ATCGGCATCTACGGCGTGAACAGGGCCAGCTTCGTGCCAGGTGGCCTG1200 IleGlyIleTyrGlyValAsnArgAlaSerPheValProGlyGlyLeu 385390395 TTCAACGGCACCACCAGCCCAGCCAACGGTGGCTGCCGAGATCTGTAC1248 PheAsnGlyThrThrSerProAlaAsnGlyGlyCysArgAspLeuTyr 400405410 GACACCAACGACGAGCTGCCACCCGACGAGAGCACCGGCAGCAGCACC1296 AspThrAsnAspGluLeuProProAspGluSerThrGlySerSerThr 415420425 CACCGCCTGAGCCACGTCACCTTCTTCAGCTTCCAGACCAACCAGGCT1344 HisArgLeuSerHisValThrPhePheSerPheGlnThrAsnGlnAla 430435440 GGCAGCATCGCCAACGCTGGCAGCGTGCCCACCTACGTGTGGACCAGG1392 GlySerIleAlaAsnAlaGlySerValProThrTyrValTrpThrArg 445450455460 AGGGACGTGGACCTGAACAACACCATCACCCCCAACCGCATCACCCAG1440 ArgAspValAspLeuAsnAsnThrIleThrProAsnArgIleThrGln 465470475 CTGCCCCTGGTGAAGGCCAGCGCTCCCGTGAGCGGCACCACCGTGCTG1488 LeuProLeuValLysAlaSerAlaProValSerGlyThrThrValLeu 480485490 AAGGGTCCAGGCTTCACCGGTGGCGGTATACTGCGCAGGACCACCAAC1536 LysGlyProGlyPheThrGlyGlyGlyIleLeuArgArgThrThrAsn 495500505 GGCACCTTCGGCACCCTGCGCGTGACCGTGAATTCCCCACTGACCCAG1584 GlyThrPheGlyThrLeuArgValThrValAsnSerProLeuThrGln 510515520 CAGTACCGCCTGCGCGTGCGCTTCGCCAGCACCGGCAACTTCAGCATC1632 GlnTyrArgLeuArgValArgPheAlaSerThrGlyAsnPheSerIle 525530535540 CGCGTGCTGAGGGGTGGCGTGAGCATCGGCGACGTGCGCCTGGGCAGC1680 ArgValLeuArgGlyGlyValSerIleGlyAspValArgLeuGlySer 545550555 ACCATGAACAGGGGCCAGGAGCTGACCTACGAGAGCTTCTTCACCCGC1728 ThrMetAsnArgGlyGlnGluLeuThrTyrGluSerPhePheThrArg 560565570 GAGTTCACCACCACCGGTCCCTTCAACCCACCCTTCACCTTCACCCAG1776 GluPheThrThrThrGlyProPheAsnProProPheThrPheThrGln 575580585 GCCCAGGAGATCCTGACCGTGAACGCCGAGGGCGTGAGCACCGGTGGC1824 AlaGlnGluIleLeuThrValAsnAlaGluGlyValSerThrGlyGly 590595600 GAGTACTACATCGACCGCATCGAGATCGTGCCCGTGAACCCAGCTCGC1872 GluTyrTyrIleAspArgIleGluIleValProValAsnProAlaArg 605610615620 GAGGCCGAGGAGGACTGAGGCTAGC1897 GluAlaGluGluAsp 625 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 7: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 625 amino acids (B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 7: MetAlaAspTyrLeuGlnMetThrAspGluAspTyrThrAspSerTyr 151015 IleAsnProSerLeuSerIleSerGlyArgAspAlaValGlnThrAla 202530 LeuThrValValGlyArgIleLeuGlyAlaLeuGlyValProPheSer 354045 GlyGlnIleValSerPheTyrGlnPheLeuLeuAsnThrLeuTrpPro 505560 ValAsnAspThrAlaIleTrpGluAlaPheMetArgGlnValGluGlu 65707580 LeuValAsnGlnGlnIleThrGluPheAlaArgAsnGlnAlaLeuAla 859095 ArgLeuGlnGlyLeuGlyAspSerPheAsnValTyrGlnArgSerLeu 100105110 GlnAsnTrpLeuAlaAspArgAsnAspThrArgAsnLeuSerValVal 115120125 ArgAlaGlnPheIleAlaLeuAspLeuAspPheValAsnAlaIlePro 130135140 LeuPheAlaValAsnGlyGlnGlnValProLeuLeuSerValTyrAla 145150155160 GlnAlaValAsnLeuHisLeuLeuLeuLeuLysAspAlaSerLeuPhe 165170175 GlyGluGlyTrpGlyPheThrGlnGlyGluIleSerThrTyrTyrAsp 180185190 ArgGlnLeuGluLeuThrAlaLysTyrThrAsnTyrCysGluThrTrp 195200205 TyrAsnThrGlyLeuAspArgLeuArgGlyThrAsnThrGluSerTrp 210215220 LeuArgTyrHisGlnPheArgArgGluMetThrLeuValValLeuAsp 225230235240 ValValAlaLeuPheProTyrTyrAspValArgLeuTyrProThrGly 245250255 SerAsnProGlnLeuThrArgGluValTyrThrAspProIleValPhe 260265270 AsnProProAlaAsnValGlyLeuCysArgArgTrpGlyThrAsnPro 275280285 TyrAsnThrPheSerGluLeuGluAsnAlaPheIleArgProProHis 290295300 LeuPheAspArgLeuAsnSerLeuThrIleSerSerAsnArgPhePro 305310315320 ValSerSerAsnPheMetAspTyrTrpSerGlyHisThrLeuArgArg 325330335 SerTyrLeuAsnAspSerAlaValGlnGluAspSerTyrGlyLeuIle 340345350 ThrThrThrArgAlaThrIleAsnProGlyValAspGlyThrAsnArg 355360365 IleGluSerThrAlaValAspPheArgSerAlaLeuIleGlyIleTyr 370375380 GlyValAsnArgAlaSerPheValProGlyGlyLeuPheAsnGlyThr 385390395400 ThrSerProAlaAsnGlyGlyCysArgAspLeuTyrAspThrAsnAsp 405410415 GluLeuProProAspGluSerThrGlySerSerThrHisArgLeuSer 420425430 HisValThrPhePheSerPheGlnThrAsnGlnAlaGlySerIleAla 435440445 AsnAlaGlySerValProThrTyrValTrpThrArgArgAspValAsp 450455460 LeuAsnAsnThrIleThrProAsnArgIleThrGlnLeuProLeuVal 465470475480 LysAlaSerAlaProValSerGlyThrThrValLeuLysGlyProGly 485490495 PheThrGlyGlyGlyIleLeuArgArgThrThrAsnGlyThrPheGly 500505510 ThrLeuArgValThrValAsnSerProLeuThrGlnGlnTyrArgLeu 515520525 ArgValArgPheAlaSerThrGlyAsnPheSerIleArgValLeuArg 530535540 GlyGlyValSerIleGlyAspValArgLeuGlySerThrMetAsnArg 545550555560 GlyGlnGluLeuThrTyrGluSerPhePheThrArgGluPheThrThr 565570575 ThrGlyProPheAsnProProPheThrPheThrGlnAlaGlnGluIle 580585590 LeuThrValAsnAlaGluGlyValSerThrGlyGlyGluTyrTyrIle 595600605 AspArgIleGluIleValProValAsnProAlaArgGluAlaGluGlu 610615620 Asp 625 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 8: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 1897 base pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: CDS (B) LOCATION: 13..1887 (ix) FEATURE: (A) NAME/KEY: misc.sub.-- feature (B) LOCATION: 13..1887 (D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note= "DNA sequence of bTS02618Aa gene encoding the BTS02618Aa protein" (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 8: GGTACCAAAACCATGGCTGACTACCTGCAGATGACCGACGAGGACTAC48 MetAlaAspTyrLeuGlnMetThrAspGluAspTyr 1510 ACCGACAGCTACATCAACCCCAGCCTGAGCATCAGCGGTCGCGACGCC96 ThrAspSerTyrIleAsnProSerLeuSerIleSerGlyArgAspAla 152025 GTGCAGACCGCTCTGACCGTGGTGGGTCGCATCCTGGGTGCCCTGGGC144 ValGlnThrAlaLeuThrValValGlyArgIleLeuGlyAlaLeuGly 303540 GTGCCCTTCAGCGGTCAGATCGTGAGCTTCTACCAGTTCCTGCTGAAC192 ValProPheSerGlyGlnIleValSerPheTyrGlnPheLeuLeuAsn 45505560 ACCCTGTGGCCAGTGAACGACACCGCCATCTGGGAAGCTTTCATGCGC240 ThrLeuTrpProValAsnAspThrAlaIleTrpGluAlaPheMetArg 657075 CAGGTGGAGGAGCTGGTGAACCAGCAGATCACCGAGTTCGCTCGCAAC288 GlnValGluGluLeuValAsnGlnGlnIleThrGluPheAlaArgAsn 808590 CAGGCCCTGGCTCGCCTGCAGGGCCTGGGCGACAGCTTCAACGTGTAC336 GlnAlaLeuAlaArgLeuGlnGlyLeuGlyAspSerPheAsnValTyr 95100105 CAGCGCAGCCTGCAGAACTGGCTGGCCGACCGCAACGACACCAAGAAC384 GlnArgSerLeuGlnAsnTrpLeuAlaAspArgAsnAspThrLysAsn 110115120 CTGAGCGTGGTGAGGGCCCAGTTCATCGCCCTGGACCTGGACTTCGTG432 LeuSerValValArgAlaGlnPheIleAlaLeuAspLeuAspPheVal 125130135140 AACGCCATCCCCCTGTTCGCCGTGAACGGCCAGCAGGTGCCCCTGCTG480 AsnAlaIleProLeuPheAlaValAsnGlyGlnGlnValProLeuLeu 145150155 AGCGTGTACGCCCAGGCCGTGAACCTGCACCTGCTGCTGCTGAAGGAT528 SerValTyrAlaGlnAlaValAsnLeuHisLeuLeuLeuLeuLysAsp 160165170 GCATCCCTGTTCGGCGAGGGCTGGGGCTTCACCCAGGGCGAGATCAGC576 AlaSerLeuPheGlyGluGlyTrpGlyPheThrGlnGlyGluIleSer 175180185 ACCTACTACGACCGCCAGCTCGAGCTGACCGCCAAGTACACCAACTAC624 ThrTyrTyrAspArgGlnLeuGluLeuThrAlaLysTyrThrAsnTyr 190195200 TGCGAGACCTGGTACAACACCGGTCTGGACCGCCTGAGGGGCACCAAC672 CysGluThrTrpTyrAsnThrGlyLeuAspArgLeuArgGlyThrAsn 205210215220 ACCGAGAGCTGGCTGCGCTACCACCAGTTCCGCAGGGAGATGACCCTG720 ThrGluSerTrpLeuArgTyrHisGlnPheArgArgGluMetThrLeu 225230235 GTGGTGCTGGACGTGGTGGCCCTGTTCCCCTACTACGACGTGCGCCTG768 ValValLeuAspValValAlaLeuPheProTyrTyrAspValArgLeu 240245250 TACCCCACCGGCAGCAACCCCCAGCTGACACGTGAGGTGTACACCGAC816 TyrProThrGlySerAsnProGlnLeuThrArgGluValTyrThrAsp 255260265 CCCATCGTGTTCAACCCACCAGCCAACGTGGGCCTGTGCCGCAGGTGG864 ProIleValPheAsnProProAlaAsnValGlyLeuCysArgArgTrp 270275280 GGCACCAACCCCTACAACACCTTCAGCGAGCTGGAGAACGCCTTCATC912 GlyThrAsnProTyrAsnThrPheSerGluLeuGluAsnAlaPheIle 285290295300 AGGCCACCCCACCTGTTCGACCGCCTGAACAGCCTGACCATCAGCAGC960 ArgProProHisLeuPheAspArgLeuAsnSerLeuThrIleSerSer 305310315 AATCGATTCCCCGTGAGCAGCAACTTCATGGACTACTGGAGCGGTCAC1008 AsnArgPheProValSerSerAsnPheMetAspTyrTrpSerGlyHis 320325330 ACCCTGCGCAGGAGCTACCTGAACGACAGCGCCGTGCAGGAGGACAGC1056 ThrLeuArgArgSerTyrLeuAsnAspSerAlaValGlnGluAspSer 335340345 TACGGCCTGATCACCACCACCAGGGCCACCATCAACCCAGGCGTGGAC1104 TyrGlyLeuIleThrThrThrArgAlaThrIleAsnProGlyValAsp 350355360 GGCACCAACCGCATCGAGAGCACCGCTGTGGACTTCCGCAGCGCTCTG1152 GlyThrAsnArgIleGluSerThrAlaValAspPheArgSerAlaLeu 365370375380 ATCGGCATCTACGGCGTGAACAGGGCCAGCTTCGTGCCAGGTGGCCTG1200 IleGlyIleTyrGlyValAsnArgAlaSerPheValProGlyGlyLeu 385390395 TTCAACGGCACCACCAGCCCAGCCAACGGTGGCTGCCGAGATCTGTAC1248 PheAsnGlyThrThrSerProAlaAsnGlyGlyCysArgAspLeuTyr 400405410 GACACCAACGACGAGCTGCCACCCGACGAGAGCACCGGCAGCAGCACC1296 AspThrAsnAspGluLeuProProAspGluSerThrGlySerSerThr 415420425 CACCGCCTGAGCCACGTCACCTTCTTCAGCTTCCAGACCAACCAGGCT1344 HisArgLeuSerHisValThrPhePheSerPheGlnThrAsnGlnAla 430435440 GGCAGCATCGCCAACGCTGGCAGCGTGCCCACCTACGTGTGGACCAGG1392 GlySerIleAlaAsnAlaGlySerValProThrTyrValTrpThrArg 445450455460 AGGGACGTGGACCTGAACAACACCATCACCCCCAACCGCATCACCCAG1440 ArgAspValAspLeuAsnAsnThrIleThrProAsnArgIleThrGln 465470475 CTGCCCCTGGTGAAGGCCAGCGCTCCCGTGAGCGGCACCACCGTGCTG1488 LeuProLeuValLysAlaSerAlaProValSerGlyThrThrValLeu 480485490 AAGGGTCCAGGCTTCACCGGTGGCGGTATACTGCGCAGGACCACCAAC1536 LysGlyProGlyPheThrGlyGlyGlyIleLeuArgArgThrThrAsn 495500505 GGCACCTTCGGCACCCTGCGCGTGACCGTGAATTCCCCACTGACCCAG1584 GlyThrPheGlyThrLeuArgValThrValAsnSerProLeuThrGln 510515520 CAGTACCGCCTGCGCGTGCGCTTCGCCAGCACCGGCAACTTCAGCATC1632 GlnTyrArgLeuArgValArgPheAlaSerThrGlyAsnPheSerIle 525530535540 CGCGTGCTGAGGGGTGGCGTGAGCATCGGCGACGTGCGCCTGGGCAGC1680 ArgValLeuArgGlyGlyValSerIleGlyAspValArgLeuGlySer 545550555 ACCATGAACAGGGGCCAGGAGCTGACCTACGAGAGCTTCTTCACCCGC1728 ThrMetAsnArgGlyGlnGluLeuThrTyrGluSerPhePheThrArg 560565570 GAGTTCACCACCACCGGTCCCTTCAACCCACCCTTCACCTTCACCCAG1776 GluPheThrThrThrGlyProPheAsnProProPheThrPheThrGln 575580585 GCCCAGGAGATCCTGACCGTGAACGCCGAGGGCGTGAGCACCGGTGGC1824 AlaGlnGluIleLeuThrValAsnAlaGluGlyValSerThrGlyGly 590595600 GAGTACTACATCGACCGCATCGAGATCGTGCCCGTGAACCCAGCTCGC1872 GluTyrTyrIleAspArgIleGluIleValProValAsnProAlaArg 605610615620 GAGGCCGAGGAGGACTGAGGCTAGC1897 GluAlaGluGluAsp 625 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 9: (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 625 amino acids (B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 9: MetAlaAspTyrLeuGlnMetThrAspGluAspTyrThrAspSerTyr 151015 IleAsnProSerLeuSerIleSerGlyArgAspAlaValGlnThrAla 202530 LeuThrValValGlyArgIleLeuGlyAlaLeuGlyValProPheSer 354045 GlyGlnIleValSerPheTyrGlnPheLeuLeuAsnThrLeuTrpPro 505560 ValAsnAspThrAlaIleTrpGluAlaPheMetArgGlnValGluGlu 65707580 LeuValAsnGlnGlnIleThrGluPheAlaArgAsnGlnAlaLeuAla 859095 ArgLeuGlnGlyLeuGlyAspSerPheAsnValTyrGlnArgSerLeu 100105110 GlnAsnTrpLeuAlaAspArgAsnAspThrLysAsnLeuSerValVal 115120125 ArgAlaGlnPheIleAlaLeuAspLeuAspPheValAsnAlaIlePro 130135140 LeuPheAlaValAsnGlyGlnGlnValProLeuLeuSerValTyrAla 145150155160 GlnAlaValAsnLeuHisLeuLeuLeuLeuLysAspAlaSerLeuPhe 165170175 GlyGluGlyTrpGlyPheThrGlnGlyGluIleSerThrTyrTyrAsp 180185190 ArgGlnLeuGluLeuThrAlaLysTyrThrAsnTyrCysGluThrTrp 195200205 TyrAsnThrGlyLeuAspArgLeuArgGlyThrAsnThrGluSerTrp 210215220 LeuArgTyrHisGlnPheArgArgGluMetThrLeuValValLeuAsp 225230235240 ValValAlaLeuPheProTyrTyrAspValArgLeuTyrProThrGly 245250255 SerAsnProGlnLeuThrArgGluValTyrThrAspProIleValPhe 260265270 AsnProProAlaAsnValGlyLeuCysArgArgTrpGlyThrAsnPro 275280285 TyrAsnThrPheSerGluLeuGluAsnAlaPheIleArgProProHis 290295300 LeuPheAspArgLeuAsnSerLeuThrIleSerSerAsnArgPhePro 305310315320 ValSerSerAsnPheMetAspTyrTrpSerGlyHisThrLeuArgArg 325330335 SerTyrLeuAsnAspSerAlaValGlnGluAspSerTyrGlyLeuIle 340345350 ThrThrThrArgAlaThrIleAsnProGlyValAspGlyThrAsnArg 355360365 IleGluSerThrAlaValAspPheArgSerAlaLeuIleGlyIleTyr 370375380 GlyValAsnArgAlaSerPheValProGlyGlyLeuPheAsnGlyThr 385390395400 ThrSerProAlaAsnGlyGlyCysArgAspLeuTyrAspThrAsnAsp 405410415 GluLeuProProAspGluSerThrGlySerSerThrHisArgLeuSer 420425430 HisValThrPhePheSerPheGlnThrAsnGlnAlaGlySerIleAla 435440445 AsnAlaGlySerValProThrTyrValTrpThrArgArgAspValAsp 450455460 LeuAsnAsnThrIleThrProAsnArgIleThrGlnLeuProLeuVal 465470475480 LysAlaSerAlaProValSerGlyThrThrValLeuLysGlyProGly 485490495 PheThrGlyGlyGlyIleLeuArgArgThrThrAsnGlyThrPheGly 500505510 ThrLeuArgValThrValAsnSerProLeuThrGlnGlnTyrArgLeu 515520525 ArgValArgPheAlaSerThrGlyAsnPheSerIleArgValLeuArg 530535540 GlyGlyValSerIleGlyAspValArgLeuGlySerThrMetAsnArg 545550555560 GlyGlnGluLeuThrTyrGluSerPhePheThrArgGluPheThrThr 565570575 ThrGlyProPheAsnProProPheThrPheThrGlnAlaGlnGluIle 580585590 LeuThrValAsnAlaGluGlyValSerThrGlyGlyGluTyrTyrIle 595600605 AspArgIleGluIleValProValAsnProAlaArgGluAlaGluGlu 610615620 Asp 625 __________________________________________________________________________
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US09/471,177 Expired - Fee Related US6448226B1 (en) | 1993-04-09 | 1999-12-23 | Bacillus thuringiensis strains and their insecticidal proteins |
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DE (1) | DE69435307D1 (en) |
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US6274721B1 (en) | 1996-07-01 | 2001-08-14 | Mycogen Corporation | Toxins active against pests |
US6369213B1 (en) | 1996-07-01 | 2002-04-09 | Mycogen Corporation | Toxins active against pests |
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
CA2160131A1 (en) | 1994-10-27 |
US6448226B1 (en) | 2002-09-10 |
HU9502920D0 (en) | 1995-12-28 |
US6143550A (en) | 2000-11-07 |
HUT73962A (en) | 1996-10-28 |
WO1994024264A1 (en) | 1994-10-27 |
HU226143B1 (en) | 2008-05-28 |
EP0694062A1 (en) | 1996-01-31 |
ATE476495T1 (en) | 2010-08-15 |
EP0694062B1 (en) | 2010-08-04 |
CA2160131C (en) | 2000-07-25 |
AU685089B2 (en) | 1998-01-15 |
AU6206694A (en) | 1994-11-08 |
DE69435307D1 (en) | 2010-09-16 |
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